Category Archives: ccw

New Ruger American Rifle Now in Rimfire

Ruger a couple years ago introduced their American rifle series of composite stocked hunting rifles to offer an affordable alternative to their M77 series bolt-action guns. Well it seems that they have now upped the ante and brought out a version of this very gun out in both .22LR and Magnum.
This gun seems to be a dead center line between the rimfire versions of the M77, which are accurate tack drivers that are also at home when hunting for small game, and the semi-automatic 10/22 fun gun. In fact, it borrows the rear sights and the magazine of
the 10/22, and feels very M77-ish in its handling. However, this is something altogether different.
Read the rest in my column at RugerTalk.com

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Ballistic Face Shields

You’ve seen them around in increasing numbers in the past few years. Those spooky Jason-meets-Michael Myers masks being
worn by ‘operators’ from video games to the sandbox. They are the ballistic face shields, and we are taking a closer look.

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Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk.com

Kids Do The Darndest Things With Guns

These days, our youth have at their fingertips access to information that we could only have dreamed of in our younger days. What they do with that knowledge when it comes to guns is the key.
Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk.com

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Airport Shootings the Bad Old Days

(From a series of articles I did this week at Firearms Talk)

These days, with all of the increased airport security since 9-11, you would think an airport in the US is the safest place in the world. Well a nutcase at LAX this week proved otherwise.  Lets take  a look at how it used to be.
Lod Airport Massacre

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Over forty years ago in 1972, a team of three Japanese terrorists, members of the Japanese Red Army Faction went on a shooting spree at Lod Airport in Israel. These Asian born radicals were loaned out to the PFLP, a Palestinian group who believed (correctly) that Asians would be less likely stopped by Israeli security. They carried Czech Vz58 assault rifles provided to the PFLP by the North Koreans. These guns, along with spare magazines were secreted in violin cases. When the shooting stopped, 26 lay dead and another 79 injured. Two of the three terrorists were killed that day and the third, injured, served 13 years in an Israeli prison. In 1978, the Mossad rubbed out the Palestinian ideas man who planned the attack for his troubles.

In 2012, a group of lawyers won a $378 million lawsuit against the North Korean government for their part in this crime.

Hijackings
Airliner hijackings peaked around the same time as the Lod Massacre. Between 1968 and 1977, the annual average number of
aircraft hijacked in the world was 41 per year . Since then the number of hijacking incidents have fallen to ‘just‘ 18 per year on average around the globe.

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In 1970 Palestinian gunmen forced four planes with a total of 400 people on board to fly to the Jordanian desert, where the hijackers blew up the aircraft after releasing most of the hostages in exchange for seven Palestinian prisoners. This, remembered as the Dawson’s Field hijackings, led to the creation of the Federal Air Marshal program by President Nixon.

However, airliners will always be under the threat of hijackings as witnessed by the events on September 11, 2001 when four jetliners were diverted by 19 international terrorists in the United States and flown into high value targets. This led to the TSA and an increase in the Federal Air Marshal Program. The first screens passengers for weapons and the second rides shotgun so to speak with armed agents on selected aircraft. Last year alone, unarmed TSA screeners found more than 1500 firearms on would-be passengers on US flights.
Rome and Vienna

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Moving to attack Israeli targets in Europe, a team of seven members of the Abu Nidal Organization attacked two separate airports at the same time. Four gunmen went to the Israeli El Al Airlines ticket window at Leonardo da Vinci Airport in Rome while another three went to the El Al counter at Vienna. Coordinating their attacks, both went loud at 0915 27 December 1985.

Firing Syrian supplied Soviet-made AKM assault rifles and lobbing hand grenades, the terrorists killed 19 civilians and injured another 138. The high injury rate is due to the fragmentation grenades filling the air with shrapnel. Four of the gunmen were killed, the other three captured. These captured ANO mercenaries (Abu Nidal was more hitman that idealist) got 30 year sentences.
A few years ago, a group of western lawyers won a $25-billion judgment  against the Syrian Arab Republic, Syrian Air Force Intelligence, and General Muhammed Al-Khuli for their state sponsorship and involvement in these airport massacres. Like the North Korean judgment, it will likely never be paid.
Increased Security
After these three incidents, there was a massive increase in security in both US and European airports. In Europe, this came in the form of local police and in some cases military police armed and equipped to get in a close quarter battle with a small group of armed terrorists. If you have ever flown into a quiet, immaculately clean European airport and seen cops armed to the teeth with HK burp guns and 5.56mm rifles, it’s because of Lod, Rome, and Vienna.

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In the US, these three attacks led most airports, especially large ones with regular international flights, to create dedicated Airport Police forces. These forces range from small 10-person departments at single terminal airports to the immense 1100-member (not a misprint) Los Angeles Airport Police Department. The LAAPD is, in fact, the largest police agency in the United States dedicated exclusively to 24-hour airport activities.  This department responded to the latest airport active shooter.
The LAX Active Shooter
This past weekend a deranged gunman, seeking apparently to teach TSA a lesson of the gravest sort, attacked a large international airport in the US. This attack at Los Angeles International, although violent and aggressive, could have been worse.

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Mad man with a gun
As noted above, while most of the 503 commercial airports in the US that have regular passenger service have TSA baggage and flight inspectors as well as Federal Air Marshals that fly through them, these airports are not ‘owned’ by the federal government. With that in mind, local law enforcement, or contract security are usually responsible for the actual protection of the airport. This is due to jurisdictional issues with the FBI stepping in to investigate terrorism incidents.
LAX is therefore protected by 1100-member Los Angeles Airport Police Department, the largest of its type in the United States if not the world. It was this department that took on one 23-year old active shooter, identified as Paul Anthony Ciancia in November 2013. While reports are sketchy, what is known is that a roommate dropped Ciancia at Terminal 3 of LAX at 930 on Friday morning on All Saints Day. Unknown to the roommate, Ciancia was not catching a flight but rather a date with destiny.
The shooting

Armed with a legally owned Smith and Wesson M15 5.56mm semi-automatic sporting rifle concealed in a bag along with five spare magazines, the man went directly to the TSA baggage checkpoint. There he encountered TSA screener Gerardo I. Hernandez, a 39-year old father of two and immigrant from El Salvador. Ciancia allegedly shot the unarmed Hernandez, striking him multiple times. He then walked away to find more victims but returned to deliver a coup de grace style execution shot to the prostrate Hernandez.

Hernandez

Hernandez

Wandering away from the checkpoint to deliver more damage, Ciancia wounded two other TSA employees and a teacher who was in the wrong place at the wrong time. The LAAPD engaged the active shooter and ended the threat with a shot to the gunman’s face with a .45ACP service weapon. While the  ‘bullet knocked his teeth out, split his tongue and blew away part of the madman’s face‘ he was not killed and is currently in custody at a medical facility, facing charges of murder of a federal officer and commission of violence in an international airport which could send him to death row. Found inside the gunman’s bag was a note that said he wanted to “kill TSA.”
Criticism of unsecure checkpoints
Although the LAAPD responded rapidly to the active shooter, there is already open discussion of why an armed officer was not at the TSA checkpoint to help secure it. According to a CBS News article, “Recent changes made at LAX have armed officers roving around the terminal and required to be within a five-minute response time instead being stationed within 300 feet of every screening area.”

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This is not the first time that TSA officers were assaulted at unsecure checkpoints. At Honolulu airport in April, a vacationing California police officer had to intervene in an attack on an unarmed TSA screener. The off duty and unarmed cop took down the assault suspect only after he observed no other security or law enforcement officers in the area.

Active Shooter concept validated

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This goes to show that a dedicated law enforcement force prepositioned can be very effective in eliminating active shooters. In police thinking in the old days, if there were a shooter who was actively killing people, responding officers would secure the area and wait for a tactical team to arrive. This type of thinking kept the responders outside Columbine High School in 1999 for more than 45 minutes while two shooters roamed the halls, firing at students and setting off homemade explosives. Now, most departments realize that time waiting translates into lives lost and receive instruction on how to handle active shooter incidents. The LAAPD had just within the past few weeks conducted an active shooter exercise.

During the shooting, many hid in bathrooms as shown by this phone captured image from that day. This actually falls into line with the Department of Homeland Security’s “Run-Hide-Fight advice for civilians in active shooter situations.)

A clear parallel is drawn in the 1985 Rome airport attack. There a single Israeli Secret Service agent stationed in Rome and at the airport at the time of the attack noticed the shooting and immediately reacted.  It took him 20 seconds to end the threat caused byl three of the terrorists  and seriously injure the remaining one. Other members from his team came running from other parts of the terminal to help out, but it was all over by the time they arrived. After an autopsy was conducted, it became clear that this one single agent had neutralized all the four terrorists: only bullets fired by this agent were found in the bodies of the terrorists.
At LAX, there were enough good people with guns to handle the bad one this time.

A Zippo Lighter with a Punch

Portable lighters have been around for over a hundred years. In fact, the Zippo Company of Bradford PA has been making them since 1932. While they have made over 500-million lighters in their time, there are a few modified versions that will do more than light your Marlboro.

A few years ago, an enterprising gunsmith took a standard production Zippo windproof lighter and made a few changes of their own. Inside the lighter was a small rimfire pistol mechanism. The barrel fit downside the wick and the original flint-striking wheel acted as the trigger. The caliber of choice? 4mm (.12-caliber) rimfire. This pipsqueak round lies somewhere between a nerf gun and a .177 BB in strength. However, getting shot with any pistol, even a .12 caliber one, would suck. Heck, this one could even put your eye out. Maybe.

Read more in my column at Firearms Talk.com

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Dealing With Remedial Shooters

Me caught showing a bit of frustration with training a group of remedial shooters. It was a snapshot taken between courses of fire while everyone was getting ready to go again.

It amazes me people who carry a gun for a living and then fail when it comes to qualification….repeatedly.   Their jobs, and their lives depend on it. While there are many things in life you can be ‘pretty good at’ and still make it,  a law enforcement course of fire has a certain standard to it.

‘Pretty good’ gunfighters don’t last that long in a gunfight.

I keep this picture to remind myself to never show frustration on the range. My bad.

Please, for the sake of your instructor, and yourself, get some regular practice before you have to qualify.

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Man Charged For Finding Lost Troopers Gun

In Michigan, a state trooper accidentally left his service weapon behind in the bathroom while going ‘code brown’. Now the citizen who found it is looking at ten years in the state pen.

The small northern Michigan village of Kalkaska, pop 2000-ish, who Ernest Hemingway immortalized in his short story, ‘the Battler’, is the setting for our tale. Quiet Kalkaska you see has a supermarket, and one day a local MSP Trooper came wheeling through with an urgent need to use the facility. Well, being the fine upstanding people that Kalkaska is known for, they allowed the boys in blue free reign of the water closet.

The thing is, the unnamed trooper in distress accidentally left his duty pistol atop the TP dispenser in the bathroom on his way out. When he returned after realizing his mistake, said abandoned gun was neither in the stall, nor in the market’s ‘lost and found box’. It had vanished.
Read the rest at my column in Firearms Talk
TP gun

Keep a Tactical Mindset

An open letter to those who walk the earth: Wake up! As you shuffle through life like a zombie, there are those out there who would do you harm, and there are some among us who would never look up from their cell phone long enough to notice.

On a crowded commuter train in San Francisco last month, a gunman, in a packed car, calmly drew a handgun out and pointed it several times at the occupants before reholstering. The thing is, although the man did nothing to hide it, no one noticed a thing. It wasn’t until the suspect, believed to be 30-year old Nikhom Thephakaysone, shot and killed a passenger that he had never seen before that morning that the occupants of the train car noticed anything was amiss.
Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk.com

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Georgia School District Adding ARs

Approaching the first anniversary of the Newtown School Shooting tragedy, one school in the Southeast is trying to be proactive by putting modern rifles in the arsenals of those who would be tasked with protecting the school.

School shootings are, despicably, not new to the country. In fact they date back as far as 1764. What the anti-gunners would have you believe though is that these unspeakable crimes are more prevalent now that so-called assault rifles are available. Well, not to nitpick, but the firearm that the Newtown shooter used was a semi-automatic sporting rifle that was illegally acquired.

In Gainesville, Georgia, the local school district is considering adding patrol carbines to the school resource officer’s (SROs) tool kit. SRO’s are certified law enforcement officers who are stationed at the school to meet both local campus security issues and enforce local and state laws. In Gainesville, they are already armed with pistols and intermediate (less lethal) weapons, but not carbines.

Under a program submitted by the police department, they are seeking $6,000 and a political mandate to place a 5.56mm rifle in a safe in each of the three protected schools in the district. The police department and the school district would split the cost evenly. The rifle would only be accessible to the resource officer through fingerprint recognition. To prevent the threat of theft, it would not be left on school grounds when the officer is not on duty.
Read the rest in my article at Firearms Talk.com

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