This is What You Call "A Hard Stop"

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Whereas, if it happened here, & it would never be allowed to, the Officer would have every kind of cr@p falling onto him, from press & senior Officers

I know someone who's husband was a firearms officer, & she lived in dread of the consequences of him having to shoot someone, & how he (& his collegues) would be put through the mill for doing the job they were trained to do
 

swee'pea99

Squire
Whereas, if it happened here, & it would never be allowed to, the Officer would have every kind of cr@p falling onto him, from press & senior Officers
Quite right too. That was a premeditated act that could very easily have caused a death, and more than likely did cause serious injury. Police have no business endangering people's lives, other than in clearly prescribed circumstances - eg, to avoid a serious risk of death to others. That's Judge Dredd territory, and I suspect your firearms officer friend would also have serious reservations about going there.
 

glasgowcyclist

Charming but somewhat feckless
Location
Scotland
And making that sort of stop is a good idea, in a city centre, when there might be explosives involved?

How about stick a tracker on the bike and pick him up somewhere a little less urban?

And what if he rides three blocks and gets on a bus?

There's no easy answer to this sort of situation but I would want a grenade-holding criminal stopped & apprehended as quickly as possible.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Motorbikes are difficult to stop, especially in an urban environment where they can out manouever a car. Ask the Police involved in the recent Bike Life idiocy in British cities.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
Has anyone here ever handled a grenade, much less actually thrown a live one?

I have, and it ain't like TV where there's a boom and everyone gets blown over, stands up and brushes themselves off. If someone has such a weapon and they can not be safely contained and isolated, then they need stopping before they can deploy that weapon. The exception would be if they were already amidst a target rich environment, then in that case you have to weigh the risk to the innocents of taking no action against the Tango, against the risk of him letting the cocking handle fly. In that situation there isn't a right answer.

The scenario shown in the video would be unlikely to play out here. However, the guy is on a small, fast, agile vehicle with the ability o go where cars can not, and the officer was able to take decisive action and stop the Tango with no collateral harm. In the tactical sense he was 100% successful.

It's a military level problem, and it's not realistic to always expect a civilian level solution.
 
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Gert Lush

Senior Member
fark me..
 
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