interesting profile of mass-murderers

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Grey_Mana

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If you read the blog Arms & the Law regularly, you've already read it.
http://armsandthelaw.com/archives/2009/04/thoughts_on_act.php

He discusses an article (http://www.policeone.com/active-sho...-single-officer-entry-against-active-killers/)

Most interesting line: Because active shooters seem so intent on killing, it’s often difficult to convince first responders that “this bad guy is one of the easiest man-with-gun encounters they will ever have,” Borsch observes. “Most officers have already faced worse opponents from a personal safety standpoint than these creeps.”

If you’re a patrol officer who’s first on the scene of an active-shooter call, should you make immediate entry in hunt for the suspect…or wait for other early responders and improvise a rapid deployment team?

Since the Columbine massacre 9 years ago, few if any trainers any longer advocate delaying for a formal SWAT call-out, which can take 30 minutes or more in some areas. But commonly a hasty assembly of 3 or more officers for a search-and-confrontation team is recommended, with coordinated movement tactics taught accordingly.

To trainer Ron Borsch, a 30-year law enforcement veteran who manages the small SEALE (South East Area Law Enforcement) Regional Training Academy in Bedford, Ohio, that’s a deadly waste of time when seconds can mean lives.

Based on his on-going research of active-shooter realities, he’s convinced that single-officer entries can potentially lessen the toll of casualties while exposing the responders involved to little additional risk. Although popular law enforcement literature has just lately begun to explore the single-officer concept, Borsch has promoted the idea to in-service trainees for more than 2 years and has taught solo- and 2-officer entry-action models in academy courses for the past year. And he finds that administrators whose officers are exposed to this approach generally accept it enthusiastically.

“We offer this report not necessarily as a tactical advisory but as an example of one trainer’s effort to give tactical instruction a research base,” explains Dr. Bill Lewinski, executive director of the Force Science Research Center at Minnesota State University-Mankato. “We offer it for your thoughtful consideration and we’d be interested in hearing comments from our readers on Ron Borsch’s conclusions.” If you have comments, please e-mail the editor.

“Time is our worst adversary in dealing with active killers,” Borsch told Force Science News. “We’re racing what I call ‘the Stopwatch of Death.’ Victims are often added to the toll every several seconds.”

Where times have been reliably documented, the average post-Columbine “rapid mass murder episode” lasts just 8 minutes, according to Borsch’s calculations. “The murderer’s timeline begins when he says it begins. Any prevention, deterrence or delay efforts have failed at that point, and the police are handicapped with catching up whenever they are notified.”

To have any hope of successfully intervening in a slaughter spree under the usual tight time strictures, law enforcement “needs to get less manpower on site sooner.” Training LEOs to wait even moments to form an impromptu entry team shows that “our country’s tactical community at large has failed to do its homework and to evolve strategies that accurately reflect the known methods of operation and patterns of active killers,” Borsch asserts. “Law enforcement has already proved many times over that we can arrive ‘too late with too many’ and spend too much time gathering pre-entry intelligence. Now we need to fix what is obviously a broken strategy.”

Borsch, who logged 17 years as a part-time SWAT team member before retiring from street work, has analyzed more than 90 active-shooter incidents on the basis of data largely ferreted out from Internet reports. Most involved schools and colleges, but workplaces, shopping malls, churches and other public places are also represented. Among his findings that have helped shape his tactical thinking:

• 98% of active killers act alone.

• 80% have long guns, 75% have multiple weapons (about 3 per incident), and they sometimes bring hundreds of extra rounds of ammunition to the shooting site.

• Despite such heavy armaments and an obsession with murder at close range, they have an average hit rate of less than 50%.

• They strike “stunned, defenseless innocents via surprise ambush. On a level playing field, the typical active killer would be a no-contest against anyone reasonably capable of defending themselves.”

• “They absolutely control life and death until they stop at their leisure or are stopped.” They do not take hostages, do not negotiate.

• They generally try to avoid police, do not hide or lie in wait for officers and “typically fold quickly upon armed confrontation.”

• 90% commit suicide on-site. “Surrender or escape attempts are unlikely.”

Because active shooters seem so intent on killing, it’s often difficult to convince first responders that “this bad guy is one of the easiest man-with-gun encounters they will ever have,” Borsch observes. “Most officers have already faced worse opponents from a personal safety standpoint than these creeps.”

He believes the profile he has drawn should “empower officers with probable cause to believe that they can successfully prevail against the predictable patterns of these mass murderers” if they arrive in time to abort an actual attack.

From their experience in dealing with “a myriad of urgent circumstances” in their normal work, street officers are “already quite used to a multi-tiered response that begins with one officer, with backup en route.” A solo officer entering an active-killer scene “has a virtual guarantee that an avalanche of manpower is coming fast behind him,” so he won’t be alone for long.

Once into the scene, to further gain confidence in advancing aggressively toward the suspect, officers need to understand the nature of these killers. Unlike conventional criminal predators, who often have no reluctance about attacking police, active shooters tend to be “cowardly,” Borsch says.

“They choose unarmed, defenseless innocents for a reason: They have no wish to encounter someone who can hurt them. They are personally risk- and pain-avoidant. The tracking history of these murderers has proved them to be unlikely to be aggressive with police. If pressed, they are more likely to kill themselves.” In his research, he has found no evidence of any LEO in the U.S. yet being wounded or killed in an active-shooting incident where mass murder was intended or accomplished.

“Officers need to understand valid military principles that apply to these calls, such as speed, surprise and violence of action,” Borsch insists. “They need to learn how to close in and finish the fight with aggression, having and keeping the ‘momentum of battle’ on their side. The idea is to keep the adversary off-balance by forcing him always to react to your actions, rather than, after contact, reacting to him.”

For example, once an active killer is spotted, Borsch favors the swift application of deadly force over seeking defensive cover in most instances. “An unintentional consequence of going to cover may be to lose sight of the offender, allowing him to gain the momentum of battle and shoot more defenseless innocents until he says it’s over.”

SEALE’s active-killer countermeasures, taught through a course called Tactical First Responder, bypass traditional instruction in team formations and movement. These can be important in a mass murder response, Borsch says—but only later, during a search-and-rescue phase. What’s realistically needed by the first one or two patrol officers to arrive at a scene—“the first of the first responders”—are instruction and practice in how to enter, move and confront the threat alone.

Thus after a briefing on the predictable patterns of offender behavior that his research has revealed, the trainees concentrate on perfecting a swift zig-zag movement down hallways, on mastering an accelerated slicing-the-pie technique for taking corners, on maneuvering up and down stairways with a patrol rifle (the response weapon of choice, given the killer’s likely armaments), and on using sight, sound, smell and intuition to gather intel that will help them close quickly on the threat. “We practice until there’s no speed less than rapid.”

If an officer enters a school in response to an active-killer call “he may see or hear nothing out of order initially,” Borsch says. “The place may be in lock-down and there may be hundreds of rooms, some of them quite distant and out of earshot, where the killer could be wreaking havoc.

“The officer may have to set out in a direction with little guidance and cover a lot of ground until he comes across something. In these situations, intelligence often belongs only to those who go get it. But what’s the alternative—just stop and wait? The killing may be continuing while you hear nothing.”

Single-officer entry has been a controversial concept, Borsch says, but he senses that the tide is starting to turn. In a recent issue of Law and Order Magazine, hardly an advocate of radical innovation, the executive director of the National Assn. of School Resource Officers wrote in an article aimed as police chiefs, “Training CANNOT be limited to the active shoot training where three, four or more officers respond and form a team.” At SEALE, Borsch has found that chiefs whose officers have completed the First Responder course often want their personnel to repeat the training to reinforce the single-entry precepts. Some departments have also hired him as a consultant to evaluate and revise their active-killer protocols.

“A slow-and-methodical approach—what I call ‘tactical loitering’—is still appropriate for most types of police encounters,” Borsch says. “Dynamic active killers are a unique problem. With time as a relentless enemy, an officer has a choice to make: does he or she take the risk of going in alone…or are potential victims left to the mercy of a rogue human while the officer stays safe?”

Even with an immediate solo entry, Borsch concedes, police may not find the killer until his bloodletting is over. But saving time by “getting called early enough and taking action early enough,” he argues, still offers the best chance for mitigating casualties.

Aided by his research, “we prepare the officers’ mind first, then work on the motor skills in hallways, stairwells and rooms,” Borsch says. To motivate courage, he hangs the walls of his training classroom with photographs of victims and their active shooters. “The victims’ pictures are big,” he explains. “Those of the killers are small. They’re worthless cowards. The innocent people who may be their victims if we don’t stop them are what matter.”

I think the same lessons are applicable to regular folks. Software over hardware.
 
good read, a lot of good points.

couple of questions sprung to mind.

active shooters - cops NEED to know there's only one of the BG. Solo entry means that he would be outnumbered if there's more than one (Columbine).

Also, i guess there should be a balance between quick reaction/ respond time and intelligence gathering.
 
Despite such heavy armaments and an obsession with murder at close range, they have an average hit rate of less than 50%.

So the first responding cop should run in and try to shoot the active shooter who is shooting better than the cops usually shoot?

They need to learn how to close in and finish the fight with aggression, having and keeping the ‘momentum of battle’ on their side. ... For example, once an active killer is spotted, Borsch favors the swift application of deadly force over seeking defensive cover in most instances.

Okay, so Banzi charge the shooter who is likely armed with a rifle that will penetrate the cops' vests readily and the shooter apparently will have an average hit rate better than that of the cops.

They strike “stunned, defenseless innocents via surprise ambush. On a level playing field, the typical active killer would be a no-contest against anyone reasonably capable of defending themselves.”

But the atypical active shooter (Charlie Whitman, Harris & Klebold, David Hernandez Arroyo Sr., Michael McLendon) comes prepared, fights back, and can be a huge danger to cops as well.

Overgeneralizing that the shooters are inept and won't fight back sounds a bit scary to me.
 
Double Naught Spy said:
Okay, so Banzi(sic) charge the shooter who is likely armed with a rifle that will penetrate the cops' vests readily and the shooter apparently will have an average hit rate better than that of the cops.

Well, sure, as long as we keep the cops safe, who cares how many victims die?

The researcher "...has found no evidence of any LEO in the U.S. yet being wounded or killed in an active-shooting incident "

Double Naught Spy said:
But the atypical active shooter (Charlie Whitman, Harris & Klebold, David Hernandez Arroyo Sr., Michael McLendon) comes prepared, fights back, and can be a huge danger to cops as well.

"Fighting back" is not an excuse for the police to break contact, as they did at Columbine when Harris and Klebold traded shots with a sheriff's deputy.

The active shooter is, as you point out, atypical. Ninety-eight percent act alone. The usual behavior of a mass shooter is to eat his gun or surrender when faced with an armed response (George Hennard, Matthew Murray). It's foolish to treat every shooter like an insurmountable problem, especially when lives are on the line.

Double Naught Spy said:
Overgeneralizing that the shooters are inept and won't fight back sounds a bit scary to me.

These shooters aren't planning on committing "suicide by cop," they're acting out twisted fantasies of hurting harmless people.

They're punks.
 
Despite such heavy armaments and an obsession with murder at close range, they have an average hit rate of less than 50%.

This is quite high when compared to combat rates. However most of the time nobody is shooting back. Taking the numbers into consideration and no other factors I would say with a rate that high your chances are much better at fighting back than running.

90% commit suicide on-site. “Surrender or escape attempts are unlikely.”

I'd like to think that they do it out of guilt for committing such horrific acts but I really think they are so self possessed and narcissistic that they can't stand the idea of not going out on a perverted way of being "on top". After all the just got even with the world that so mistreated them that they had to go out and kill a bunch of people.
Single-officer entry has been a controversial concept, Borsch says, but he senses that the tide is starting to turn. In a recent issue of Law and Order Magazine, hardly an advocate of radical innovation, the executive director of the National Assn. of School Resource Officers wrote in an article aimed as police chiefs, “Training CANNOT be limited to the active shoot training where three, four or more officers respond and form a team.”

Short of going to partner system for LEOs I don't see anyway around this.
 
I rode with my cousin a few weeks ago (deputy). I'm going to join as soon as I can get accepted. He has a personal AR but they wont allow him to carry it in his cruiser. I don't understand letting our law enforcement be out gunned by the BGs. Hopefully this will change with this albeit slow change in mindset.
 
Since the mass murderer profile is based on the article from PoliceOne that cites Borsch, I would like to add the additional shortcomings to the article that indicate some serious shortcomings.

The researcher "...has found no evidence of any LEO in the U.S. yet being wounded or killed in an active-shooting incident "

Well if no officers have been killed or injured whilst trying to intervene in previous mass shootings, then obviously intervention is safe for officers. :rolleyes:

Okay, so let's look at the expert and his research...

Borsch, who logged 17 years as a part-time SWAT team member before retiring from street work, has analyzed more than 90 active-shooter incidents on the basis of data largely ferreted out from Internet reports. Most involved schools and colleges, but workplaces, shopping malls, churches and other public places are also represented. Among his findings that have helped shape his tactical thinking:
http://www.policeone.com/active-sho...-single-officer-entry-against-active-killers/

Well, I guess since the author is the expert, obviously his opinion carries considerbly more weight than mine and you are willing to believe him without verification, but given that his opinion is based on some significantly faulty research, I will go with my opinion.

What faulty research? Glad you asked. So no officers have been injured or killed during active shooter situations in the US. BULL CRAP! Mind you, I am not the expert, but by golly I can find lots of incidents to the contrary using the exact same resource he used, the internet. Maybe you don't think they are a lot, but given that there aren't supposed to be ANY, then what I found is a lot.

Officer Billy Paul Speed was killed by Charles Whitman. Speed was one of the first officers arriving on scene at UT, responding to the shooting. This was an active shooter mass murderer incident, was it not? UT is in Austin and Austin is in Texas and Texas was part of the United States at the time of the shooting, wasn't it? This is just one internet references of dozens that were apparently missed by Borsch...http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/notorious_murders/mass/whitman/index_1.html

Officer Allen Mcleod was killed and three other officers wounded by Frederick Cowan during his mass murder active shooter rampage in New York. At the time of the shooting, New York was part of the United States.
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/notorious_murders/mass/neptune/reinhard_4.html

Officer Elmo Gabbert was shot in the hip by Kenneth Tornes during a standoff after cops chased Tornes after he killed is wife and then several firefighters at a fire station. This happened in Mississippi which was part of the US at the time of the shooting.
http://emernet.emergency.com/ff-shoot.htm

Officer John Warde responded to a workplace shooting and was shot by Arturo Reyes Torres who also wounded Officer Art Romo via flying glass from a shot that missed that officer. Torres had shot and killed four coworkers and wounded another in California, located in the western United States.
http://articles.latimes.com/p/1997/dec/20/news/mn-431

Well gee, I am no expert, but I can see that there are lots of officers injured or killed by active shooter mass murderers in the US. The danger is VERY REAL to officers and the article cited above misrepresents that danger to officers.

Unlike the article, I provided some links. You may or may not agree with a couple of the selections, but there is no excuse for missing classic mass murder active shooter examples such as with Whitman and Cowan. Those are fairly well known and ANYBODY researching this sort of thing should have found them.

I am certain there are more, but I think I have made my point to call into question the accuracy in profiling of mass murderer active shooters and their threat to police officers. Note that I have not included incidents like Klebold and Harris where they attempted to harm officers during the actual incident but were unsuccessful. I did not include incidents where the shooters tried to do harm to officers after being caught (like Kip Kinkel). I also didn't include Hank Earl Carr who was a mass murderer who made cops part of the mass that he murdered. AND, I didn't use any incidents that came AFTER Borsch's research was conducted such as the Alabama shooting that left 10 dead and at least one officer injured or the incident in Philly that resulted in the deaths of three officers.

Given the obvious examples of officers killed or wounded while trying to engage mass murdering active shooters that were obviously missed in the research, do you really feel inclined to believe the percentage data used to make of the profile? I would be inclined to believe that without seeing the author's actual data, the profile he has created is likely quite faulty. It certainly appears to be in regard to the danger to officers.

“this bad guy is one of the easiest man-with-gun encounters they will ever have,” Borsch observes.

Tell that to the families of the fallen officers.

Maybe I missed it, but how many mass murderer active shooters did Borsch stop himself?
 
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DNS- You left out the Tyler Courthouse shooting where the numbers of LEOs shot was in double digits. Most of them were wearing vests so they were only lightly wounded but they faced the shooter head on and he did not suddenly decide to kill himself.

I certainly don't agree with this presumption:

Because active shooters seem so intent on killing, it’s often difficult to convince first responders that “this bad guy is one of the easiest man-with-gun encounters they will ever have,” Borsch observes. “Most officers have already faced worse opponents from a personal safety standpoint than these creeps.”

I don't see how someone intent on mass murder will make it easy on the police. Certainly if he is surrounded the crazy loon might kill himself but that would not early on, when he is acting out his insane rage.

The trade off here is whether or not the lives of those in danger are worth the risk. For most cops the answer is no.
 
Sorry, I got so caught up in all this that I missed one at my back door. I am not an expert with 17 years of SWAT experience and I did note that there must be other incidents. Even so, I should have recalled the officers that were injured and didn't, just noting in a quick search that Wilson was killed along with other non-LEOs. Thanks for the catch. Yes, add to the total three officers wounded at the Tyler Courthouse shooting (luckily, it wasn't double digits), along with Mark Wilson, the CCW guy who was killed whilst exchaning shots with Arroyo. Then there were the non-LEO and non-CCW victims as well, of course.

I also seem to recall an incident in Durango, Colorado about a guy who killed his father and went on a shooting rampage that injured multiple officers. I don't recall how many he actually killed and so he may not be a mass murder, but he tried to be a mass murderer. Maybe somebody else can recall the incident. As I recall, he may have used a scope bolt rifle to do his shooting. The guy, once again as I recall, turned out to be found insane.

So much for the "easiest man with a gun" encounters. They are easy except when officers are getting injured and killed. Then they aren't. The question is, how do you know what they will be when you roll up, as a police officer? Do you go with Borsch's notion that this is just another easy man with a gun call (note that some active shooters are women, however)? That would be pretty darned stupid, don't you think?
 
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I think as DNS has pointed out, that the author has dangerously lumped all types of active shooter calls into on convenient (for his theory) package.

I'm not sure exactly what he's advocating. I spent the last 4 years of my police career working in an area where a single officer entry on an active shooter call was the only likely response. It would be that way in much of rural America. You do what you have to do...it's that simple.

Grossman has stated that many of the school shooters he researched stopped shooting when commanded to stop...it's part of his video game theory. I have personally sat in a seminar and heard him say that with my own ears. But that doesn't mean I'd order an active shooter to stop instead of shooting him.

I resigned myself to the fact that it would likely be me alone responding to an active shooter at one of the two schools or a church in my jurisdiction. I wasn't happy with the idea, but it was the only available option.

But in jurisdictions that are manned well enough that your will likely have multiple officers arriving simultaneously, it only makes sense to use the more standard active shooter response. How many lone officers do you need wandering around a school or other large structure looking for the shooter? It could get dangerously confusing, especially since it's likely some would be in plainclothes.
 
A great argument for concealed carry! 8 minutes from start to end (Average). The police could be in the parking lot or even inside the building. If they dont know exactly where to go, 8 minutes is not that much time.
 
I'm not sure exactly what he's advocating. I spent the last 4 years of my police career working in an area where a single officer entry on an active shooter call was the only likely response. It would be that way in much of rural America. You do what you have to do...it's that simple.

Right, and that is a fine way to address the problem and if you know the dangers you may face and are prepared for them, then you are more likely to be appropriately successful.

Cops do get killed on these calls, or injured, so it is important to not lose sight of the fact that mass murdering active shooters can't be counted on to fold up or surrender at the sight of armed confrontation.
 
A great argument for concealed carry!

And that Is the goal all of us who believe in RTBA. A goal we should be working towords actively.
A nut job expects his victems and the environment he is in to be weapon free.
Imagine his surprise when his twisted actions are cut short by a well armed, trained civilian he considers his prey.
 
These shooters aren't planning on committing "suicide by cop," they're acting out twisted fantasies of hurting harmless people.
Witness the guy in California who passed on the Wiesenthal Center to shoot up the Jewish Community Center. The Wiesenthal Center had armed guards.

These freaks want to SHOOT, not BE shot. First they want to shoot as many helpless people as they can, then when they're sated, or someone's about to intervene, themselves. This is about CONTROL over the lives of others, then their own, committing suicide rather than be killed by police.

Protect yourself or don't get protected at all, unless you're willing to roll the dice that police are both willing AND able to respond before it's your turn.
 
All LEO's need a rifle and shotgun in their patrol guns. My lord a 870 riot gun and a 30/30 are better than a pistol to pistol shootout. What is wrong today is that people have been conditioned to be sheep and not sheep dogs. Courage and the willingness to be violent to protect your self or others is in short supply in the USA today.
 
A nut job expects his victems and the environment he is in to be weapon free.

Short of gun ranges, police stations, hunting lodges, etc., that is a pretty safe assumption just about anywhere. So few people carry that even in states with concealed carry, the chances are still awfully slim of 1) encountering a person with a CCW permit that is 2) carrying and 3) willing or able to act. Note that even when there may be folks present and armed, they may not be able to do anything (see http://www.bnd.com/news/crime/story/717689.html where non-armed people took down the shooter). Also note that some shooters most definitely plan on meeting resistence such as Arroyo in Tyler, Texas (mentioned above), or this guy, Jason Hamilton who fired something like 200 rounds, killing three (one a police officer), wounded another officer, then killed himself http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/254058/sniper_kills_4_in_moscow_idaho.html?cat=47. He attacked the county emergency dispatch center that is across the street (or next to?) the Sheriff's Department). Charles Whitman certainly expected armed resistence as well.
 
I advise that anyone here who has kids in school to ask their teacher what their active shooter policy is...ask the teacher not the principle. You might be surprised. I felt York County PA's to be pretty good from both a common sense and LE perspective.- George
 
Despite such heavy armaments and an obsession with murder at close range, they have an average hit rate of less than 50%.

This is quite high when compared to combat rates. However most of the time nobody is shooting back. Taking the numbers into consideration and no other factors I would say with a rate that high your chances are much better at fighting back than running.

Seems to me that shooting victims at close range is quite dissimilar from police shootings or military engagements. Police officers have a lower hit rate precisely because they don't behave like sociopaths.
 
I don't see how someone intent on mass murder will make it easy on the police. Certainly if he is surrounded the crazy loon might kill himself but that would not early on, when he is acting out his insane rage.

The trade off here is whether or not the lives of those in danger are worth the risk. For most cops the answer is no.

I think the point they're trying to make is that when a criminal is intent on evading capture while using a firearm, they are going to be at least mildly successful. A criminal shooting at you while hiding behind cover or running from building to building is going to be more dangerous than one so intent on killing civilians that he stands out in the open and doesn't even bother trying to hide.
 
I guess you can use the basic theory that a lone cop running to the bad guy will:

1. Occupy the bad guy in a protracted gunfight
- allowing more cops to arrive
- allowing more people to escape
2. Kill the bad guy
3. Get killed
4. Make the bad guy use up ammo
5. Allow a more precise location to be called in
6. Make the suicidal kook shoot himself sooner

Sure, it works, and in the most scenarios cops would probably go for it, but having at least one other cop with you makes a huge difference in survivability.

The guys that blindly recommend you run in like a blue canary are just playing the stats or they have a comfortable armchair...you WILL probably be able to make a difference, but I wouldn't hold someone at fault if they waited for a backup...they were hired as a cop, not a kamikaze.

One caveat - I'm talking about waiting a moment, not waiting 20 minutes!

The main concepts of active shooter training are to get the cops headed to the sound of gunfire quickly, no slow room clearing, no first aid, etc...step over the bodies, ask the fleeing people where the gunman is and drive on. You may not hear anything above the sound of fire alarms, smoke, screams, no lights, etc...(IED use).
 
Apples and oranges

So if they behaved like sociopaths, police could shoot better?
Not 'better', but more hits per shot fired.

Cops don't pick no-gun zones, walk up close, and start killing innocents. But sociopaths do - their precise goal is to inflict maximum casualties. Cops have a lower hit to shot ratio because their goals for shooting are different.

Cops are more likely to shoot from a distance to neutralize threats; pscyhos don't bother. In a violent shoot-out with bank robbers, cops might shoot to keep the BG pinned down, or to provide cover fire. Those shots likely count as misses. If a cop needs to shoot somebody, they shoot regardless of whether that person is a perfect still face-on target or not. Sociopaths reportedly skip the hard shots and pick the next easy prey.

Now, the rare cases in the news where teams of cops unload on a single guy, and reload multiple times (and have a low hit rate) and claim afterwards that they thought his wallet was a gun or that he opened fire because his back was to them - well, those cops aren't representative of the vast majority of cops.
 
It was mentioned above that comparatively few people carry concealed. This is true, but one carrier may effectively protect a hundred people at church or a thousand people at a concert at a time. Our effectiveness exceeds our immediate numbers.
 
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