
Cop Needs 17 Center Mass Hits w/ .40 S&W to Stop Assailant
A police officer needed 22 rounds of .40 caliber S&W to bring down an armed attacker.
Great link, I was trying to find a body cam vid and got distracted. Squirrels......The full story (as linked in the article above), is linked below. After the re-telling of events, there's an excellent synopsis/overview of each of the officers actions and whether they were right, wrong, and actions that could have been done differently.
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Officer Down: The Peter Soulis Incident
Officer Peter Soulis was monitoring traffic from a service station parking lot when he spotted a Toyota pull onto thewww.lawofficer.com
Well spoken mister Gruber I like your thinking on the subject!I tend not to get too excited by events like this, or let it influence what I choose to carry.
Itās an outlier, waaaaaay on the right side of the bell curve of defensive incidentsāeven LE involved defensive incidents.
Yes, shifting to āfailure drillā mode is a helpful skill, but...the head is a small, highly mobile, naturally armored target...a high percentage shot may not present itself, while a good ācenter massā shots do...so, you take the best shot you're given.
DittoWell spoken mister Gruber I like your thinking on the subject!![]()
Agreed, I think stories like this are important to point out that caliber is not the only thing that matters.I tend not to get too excited by events like this, or let it influence what I choose to carry.
Itās an outlier, waaaaaay on the right side of the bell curve of defensive incidentsāeven LE involved defensive incidents.
Yes, shifting to āfailure drillā mode is a helpful skill, but...the head is a small, highly mobile, naturally armored target...a high percentage shot may not present itself, while a good ācenter massā shots do...so, you take the best shot you're given.
Very good article and great information on handgun versus rifle rounds.I would think that facts in this story are a bit askew. One thing for sure, the ammo that was used by the officer meets the FBI standards for penetration. So the story says the officer shot rounds through his windshield at the suspect but it doesn't say how many rounds through the windshield was fired. That plays a role in bullet performance. Plus based on the bullet performance of that round, it meets the standards as many other 9mm and 45ACP rounds would. Leading me to believe the .40 round wouldn't make a difference if another round would have been used. So, that would leave me to believe the suspect was on an illegal substance, an or no vitals were hit in the qouted center mass shots. The attached article by a person that actually sees bullet wounds regularly supports the fact that the .40 was not the issue. Take a read.
A Trauma Surgeon Talks About Wound Ballistics and Stopping Power
"I got involved in wound ballistics and what it really took to stop a threat during residency in Philadelphia because I had a friend on the police force who lost his job for use of excessive force by shooting somebody, I think it was, 18 times, and I always thought, maybe he needed to shoot that...www.policemag.com
Roy is a good example!Agreed, I think stories like this are important to point out that caliber is not the only thing that matters.
Here's another example
The will to live/fight does not consider caliber.