This article originally appeared in Force Science News #13 published by the Force Science Research Center (www.forcesciencenews.com). It’s reprinted here with the center’s permission. The author wishes to remain anonymous, but his account has been verified.
I had taken my family to a McDonald’s restaurant on our way to a pool party. I was off-duty, in civilian clothes and armed. I stood in line oblivious (like all the other patrons) to the fact that an armed suspect had taken the manager hostage and was forcing her to open the safe in the restaurant’s office. One of the cashiers had seen this, and I overheard her telling another employee that the business was being robbed.
At that time, I had approximately 15 years of experience and was a SWAT team member and use-of-force/firearms instructor. I had talked to my wife about such an occurrence and we had a preplanned response. When I told her to take the children and leave the building, she didn’t hesitate. I began quietly telling employees and patrons to leave. My thinking was to remove as many innocent bystanders as possible and then leave myself.
I thought that because I didn’t see the suspect enter he must have come in from a side door or employee entrance, and I assumed he would go out the same way. However, as I stood near the front counter trying to get some of the kitchen help out, the suspect came from the office area and began running in my direction.
I immediately noted the large semi-automatic pistol in his hand. The distance was about 15-20 yards. I drew my weapon, announced myself and took a kneeling position behind the counter. Unfortunately, the suspect raised his weapon at me and a gunfight erupted. The suspect fired a total of two rounds in my direction. I fired 11, striking him 10 times.
My weapon empty, I ran from the line of fire to reload my spare magazine. I then approached the downed suspect and could tell he was seriously wounded. Right then I realized there might be more than one bad guy (the thought had not crossed my mind before this), and I began to scan the 360 to check.
I immediately noticed a small child lying behind me. I saw blood pooling under her head and knew at a glance she was dead. One of the bullets fired at me had struck this child.
And, unbeknownst to me, my family had tried to exit out the fire door, which was locked. My wife was still trying to get out when the shooting started, and she pushed my kids under a table where they all witnessed the gunfight.
The end result: The suspect died, I survived but a 9-year-old girl did not.
Lessons Learned
I tell you this story because I think this topic is of utmost importance although it’s largely ignored in mainstream police training. I want to tell you some of the lessons I learned from this incident:
1) If you are going to carry a firearm off-duty, you should carry extra ammo. Security camera video of this incident revealed that I fired all 11 rounds from my Glock 26 in about two seconds. My extra magazine held 17 rounds. Words cannot describe the emotion I felt when I slammed that mag into my weapon and was able to still be in the fight.
Mostly because of circumstances (distance) and my training, my rounds were on target. It could have happened differently, and the reality is most of us miss more than we hit when involved in a gun battle.
2) You cannot have the typical police mind-set in an off-duty situation. I ended up in this incident without a radio, backup, body armor, handcuffs, other force options or time to think it through. I was truly most frightened when the gunfight was over and I stood there covering the suspect with my weapon in my T-shirt and shorts. I was really worried that one of my own guys might not recognize me, and that there might be some other off-duty copper around who would think I was the bad guy.
The smartest, most responsible thing I could have done would have been to take care of my family first. I should have seen personally to their safety. If I had grabbed them and gone outside, I would have spared them this entire experience, and that little girl would probably still be alive today.
Words cannot describe the emotions we all went through after this incident. I recognized afterward that it could have been one of my children lying dead because of my actions. When you are off-duty, your first responsibility is to your family. Never forget this.
3) I survived this incident. Partly due to my training and tactics. Partly due to God’s grace and blind luck. But the other side of the coin is that I got into this incident because of my training. I switched immediately into cop mode without stopping to consider that I was at a great tactical disadvantage. Most of us are driven and dedicated to the point of self-destruction, and I think good cops die because we are taught to place our personal safety second when others are in danger.
Because I had never trained realistically for a situation like this, I was unprepared. Most of the guys I worked with then and now carry off-duty weapons, but few of them, if any, have really taken the time to engage in realistic training and preparation for how to handle an off-duty incident.
Training can be as simple as discussing these types of situations with your coworkers. Since this shooting, I have devoted at least one quarterly range session with my students to off-duty encounters and the associated considerations.
4) The responsibility of carrying a firearm is huge. I had devoted countless hours to training for the fight but was not fully prepared for the aftermath. None of the training scenarios, books, films, etc. that I learned from touched upon the fact that when you take that gun out and decide to take action, 9-year-old kids can get killed. Even if you do everything by the book, use good tactics and are within policy and the law, the outcome can still be negative.
You must remember that the suspect does not go to the range and does not practice weapons safety rules. They do not care what’s in their line of fire. If it’s you or a suspect, you gotta do what you gotta do, but whether you’re on-duty or off-duty, we need to train to look at the totality of the incident. Letting the bad guy go because doing otherwise would place innocent people in grave danger needs to be more socially acceptable amongst our ranks. I think we’re starting to see more of this in the pursuit policies of most agencies, and I have tried to carry this message over into my training and teaching.
Conclusion
I guess the bottom line here is that it’s good to be on autopilot when it comes to tactics in these situations, but we can’t go on autopilot in our assessment and examination of the environment and circumstances leading up to and during the event. We must strongly separate on-duty mind-set and off-duty mind-set and make the boundaries clear.
The Key Points
Here are the lessons-learned, boiled down:
- If you carry a firearm off-duty, carry extra ammo.
- Don’t utilize the typical police mind-set in an off-duty situation.
- Engage in realistic training to handle an off-duty incident.
- Remember: The responsibility of carrying a firearm is huge.