thatJeffguy
Forum Lieutenant
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The second you die, your career is over.
I can always find another career.
A few things I've noticed here, especially from the anti-self defense crowd. Having a sidearm doesn't mean that it's Option 1, it's just another tool in your wide box of tools. The notion that an other wise rational and sane individual would, upon possessing "an item", turn into the sort of deranged lunatic that would shoot a hostile drunk or a combative dementia patient is absurd. The use of a firearm, or any deadly weapon, is the final option, utilized when (and each state is slightly different in this) you are engaged in combat with a severe disparity of force. A little old lady slapping your hand away when you go to check her breathing? Probably a "NO SHOOT" situation. A drunk that's just committed vehicular homicide and is up for his third strike that pulls a knife on you and starts slashing? Certainly a candidate for consideration of the judicial use of a firearm. Simply having "an item" doesn't mean it's your first plan of action.
Also, their is no statute that I'm aware of that would open you to prosecution for an otherwise justifiable shooting simply because of your career choice. We're discussing "law" and "company policy". If someone initiates force against me, to a degree that I feel my life is in danger, my only goal is to stop that threat. If I've followed applicable state laws, I won't be prosecuted. Perhaps I'll lose my job, perhaps I won't. In a number of situations like this, being the "good guy" and coming out alive after a justifiable shoot is sometimes enough to sweep the issue under the rug. Maybe it's not and maybe I'd lose my position. Well, I'd have lost my position if I were killed, so what's the difference?
While I do hold issue with that idea I do agree with a lot of the thoughts I'm seeing expressed here. A concealed firearm should be CONCEALED well, in a decent IWB holster that prevents printing and allows the user to maintain control of the firearm even when in "odd" situations. The liability from a small sidearm slipping free of it's ankle holster and discharging, or being lost in the shuffle and picked up by someone, would be staggering and would be placed on the individual that didn't properly secure their carry piece. If I'm carrying, odds are no one will ever know unless I'm compelled to use it and, if this were to happen, I'd like to think that everyone involved (minus the decedent criminal) would be happy that someone had the wherewithal to bring an end to the life-threatening behavior.
Our local PD teaches a basic self defense program based on the Mondanock "system" including the use of the Kubaton. I'd highly recommend all EMS personnel taking a class such as this and carrying a Kubaton after learning it's proper use. It's all about escalation of force, a Kubaton can subdue, through pain compliance, an unruly drunk or a hostile at close quarters. A mini-Maglite can be used as a Kubaton and it wouldn't even beg the question as to the reason you're carrying the object.