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B. P. union blasts Homeland Security instructions to 'run away' and 'hide'

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Border Patrol union blasts Homeland Security instructions to 'run away' and 'hide' from gunmen
By Perry Chiaramonte June 29, 2012
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Border Patrol agents in Arizona are blasting their bosses for telling them, along with all other Department of Homeland Security employees, to run and hide if they encounter an "active shooter."

It's one thing to tell civilian employees to cower under a desk if a gunman starts spraying fire in a confined area, say members of Tucson Local 2544/National Border Patrol Council, but to give armed law enforcement professionals the same advice is downright insulting. The instructions from DHS come in the form of pamphlets and a mandatory computer tutorial.

“We are now taught in an ‘Active Shooter’ course that if we encounter a shooter in a public place we are to ‘run away’ and ‘hide’" union leader Brandon Judd wrote on the website of 3,300-member union local. “If we are cornered by such a shooter we are to (only as a last resort) become ‘aggressive’ and ‘throw things’ at him or her. We are then advised to ‘call law enforcement’ and wait for their arrival (presumably, while more innocent victims are slaughtered)."

The FEMA-administered computer course, entitled “IS-907- Active Shooter: What You Can Do,” is a 45-minute tutorial that provides guidance to all employees on how to recognize indicators of possible workplace violence and what to do should their office be invaded by gunmen and focuses around three main options; either evacuate, hide out, or in dire circumstances, take action.
More on link
 
Sounds like someone is taking OSHA regulations a little too seriously. ;D
 
GAP said:
The FEMA-administered computer course, entitled “IS-907- Active Shooter: What You Can Do,” is a 45-minute tutorial that provides guidance to all employees on how to recognize indicators of possible workplace violence and what to do should their office be invaded by gunmen and focuses around three main options; either evacuate, hide out, or in dire circumstances, take action.

Kinda makes you wonder what they consider "dire circumstances"....
 
I think in my world, the escalation through options would likely span the time to think '1,2,3'. Shit simple ROE. Unless I was only armed with a keyboard or pencil of course.
 
I want to know if this course was designed for armed officers, or the entire federal service in general, sort of the like the same crap that they push on all the members of the treasury department (eg, your rights as an employee:  I tell my SSM that I dont feel that he is respecing my rights to express my dissatisfaction with his management style,  I will be sweeping the floor by walking backwards, as the broom is up my heiny)
 
What I found interesting when I was at my local Social Security office was that they have signs posted that explain that it is a federal offense punishable up to life in prison for assaulting, blah, blah, or "kill or attempt to kill" (yes, that's how it was worded) a federal worker in the performance of their duty.

The program in question was more likely intended for a general audience rather than armed officers, but since you have to treat all employees the same to meet some asinine bureaucratic mandate, everyone gets slapped with the same educational brush.
 
a different way to look at dealing with Active Shooters:

https://pjmedia.com/lifestyle/2017/07/14/everything-you-think-you-know-about-an-active-shooter-situation-is-wrong/

Everything You Think You Know About An Active Shooter Situation Is Wrong
BY JEFF SANDERS JULY 14, 2017 CHAT 11 COMMENTS

Image Courtesy Shutterstock
I have just completed the ALICE training course on dealing with an active shooter situation. If your business has not gone through this, you need to get them on board. Immediately. This is simply some of the best training I have ever been through. And it does not involve using firearms at all.

We have all heard about the tragedies at Columbine, Sandy Hook, Aurora, and Virginia Tech where an active shooter massacred people. Sadly, this sort of thing is probably not going away any time soon. How should people caught in this situation respond? Not everyone is going to carry a gun. (I am a concealed carry weapons instructor and strongly support the 2nd Amendment. But let's face it, many people simply are not going to carry, and many should NOT carry a firearm.)

Very, very few people will dedicate the necessary amount of time and training to be able to shoot an attacker without accidentally shooting innocent people. And even if you are armed and trained, it would be incredibly difficult to react fast enough and track down the killer and eliminate the threat. There is training, however, that uses our natural God-given abilities that even children can use, and it's in the ALICE training seminars.

"ALICE" is the acronym for a series of responses: Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, and Evacuate. You do not need to do all of these responses, or in the order spelled out in the acronym. You do whatever your situation demands at the moment.

But before we get into the responses, take a look at the perpetrators in many or most of these tragedies. Usually it is one shooter. (Quite often deranged too.) Not very well trained in firearms. And they are using (in many cases) a handgun. A pistol is much less accurate than a rifle.

And the shooter often does what when the police show up? They shoot themselves, or they give up. They are shooting unarmed people who are not fighting back ... so the perp is generally not the most courageous person on the block.

3 Tactics to Help You Survive an Active Shooter Situation
What if everyone just scattered at the first shot? Do you know how incredibly difficult it is to shoot a moving target? I don't want predictability. I want chaos and movement. It's pretty hard to hit numerous targets all chaotically scattering at once. Here is a video of a man with a .38 caliber revolver shooting at another man — six times — and missing!


Lesson learned: MOVE! The perp was a lousy shot. Keep moving and you will increase your chances of survival. And if you run away, you will become a smaller target. The worst thing to do is stand still.

Yet that is what happened at Columbine and Sandy Hook. At Columbine High School the students were instructed to hide under desks. That is what they did in the library. Stay there and wait ..."until help arrives." We listened to the 911 call from the teacher in the library who told the students to stay still. They waited ... four minutes and ten seconds until the two shooters showed up and killed ten students.

At one point in the 911 call a student says "Can't we just leave?" There was a door, right there in the library, that led to the outside. They could have all escaped. This video accurately portrays the scene where the students hid under desks, waiting for the killers to arrive (it is not the actual footage of the massacre):


At Sandy Hook the shooter shot his way through the glass near the front door and into the office and killed the principal and the school psychologist. The school's PA system was on, so everyone in the building heard the shooting. The teachers did what they were told to do: lock the door, turn out the lights, retreat into the bathroom.

The murderer broke into the first room, heard the children in the bathroom, and killed everyone. Did the same to the second room. When he came to the third room, one little boy, Jesse Lewis, yelled "RUN!" and several children ran right past the killer. He was so focused on what was directly in front of him that he did not see the six children run past him. They lived. The rest died.

And that brings up another very interesting bit of information. When people are in a heightened state of anxiety or stress, and are focusing on the one thing in front of them, they get tunnel vision and cannot focus on anything else (like six kids running past them). Watch this video and follow the instructions carefully.


6 Things You Can Do to Disarm the Shooter if You're Ever Involved in an Orlando-Style Attack
Did you follow the instructions? Did you notice anything else? I DIDN'T when I saw this for the first time! I was completely stunned when I later realized what I missed!! So ... remember to do something, anything, to throw off the attacker's plans. If dozens of people are running away in dozens of directions at the same time, he cannot focus on all of you.

The ALICE acronym begins with Alert. When we are at work, we should be in a state of awareness that it may not be just another day. Listen to your instincts. Your mind is constantly picking up signals from your environment ... and it may be telling you that something is out of place. Something is not right. If it doesn't seem right, it probably isn't right. How attune to your environment or people's behavior are you? Please watch this video all the way to the end. It sure surprised me.


Can you spot trouble before it happens? Don't forget the lesson of that video. Also, do you know gunshots when you hear them? At Virginia Tech some people heard the gunfire, but told themselves it was just a car backfiring or fireworks. A professor, Dr. Lebrescu, knew gunfire when he heard it (he was a Holocaust survivor). While others were trying to figure out how to respond, he immediately told all the students to jump out of the second story window. Sixteen jumped and lived. He died in a hail of bullets as he was blocking the door from the killer.

Not all guns sound alike. A .22 sounds a lot different from a 12-gauge shotgun or a 9mm pistol. Educate yourself, and be alert.

Lockdown. This is the "hide" in "run/hide/fight" that many schools and businesses use. If you cannot get out, then shelter in place. But does that mean just lock the door? Of course not. You MUST prevent them from getting in. You can move heavy pieces of furniture like a desk in front of the door.

In my ALICE training, the others and I worked as teams in drills to do this. If there is rope or 550 cord (have some in your room), tie it around the door and hold the rope at an angle away from the door. I did this and the "attacker" simply could not open the door no matter how hard they tried. Of course, stand at an angle away from the door so they cannot shoot you.

This video shows students at Auburn University (War Eagle!) undergoing ALICE training. Please note how they barricade, beginning at the 2:55 mark. The video also shows other creative ways (like looping a belt around the top of the door) to prevent entry by the killer.


When the Virginia Tech killer tried to enter Room 205, the students had moved a desk to block the door. The killer could not enter; no one was shot in that room.

When Is It Legal to Go Lethal? 8 Tips on the Limits of Self-Defense
Inform. If you are on the PA system, clearly communicate to the whole building what is happening. Do not use code words. Do not say, "Code Silver" or something cryptic like that. Say, "Active shooter in the building! This is not a drill. Active shooter from the entrance, approaching the south wing of the building," or something similar.

Wherever you are, use your cell phone to clearly tell dispatch where you are and what you have seen. Now would be a good time to learn the difference between revolvers and semi-automatic pistols, shotguns and rifles. If you can accurately identify what kind of gun you saw, what the shooter was wearing and what direction they were going, that would greatly help the police.

Counter. In a previous article that I wrote last year, I said that if you have a gun, shoot the attacker.

Yes, if you are sufficiently trained and legally carry a firearm, you certainly have that option. However, remember ... you cannot miss. You are responsible for every bullet that exits your gun. You must know that in all the commotion, there is a very real likelihood that you may shoot innocent bystanders.

If you are not armed, and the vast majority of people reading this will not be armed in such a situation, you can still counterattack and take out the bad guy. The attacker cannot react as fast as you can react. I proved that when the ALICE instructor gave me an empty airsoft pistol and told me to point the gun at his forehead and pull the trigger as soon as I saw his hands move.

Every single time I saw his hands move, I pulled the trigger. But it was too late. He had already grabbed the gun and pushed it out of the way. I could not react fast enough to his action. This action/reaction delay is also called the "OODA Loop." OODA stands for observe, orient, decide, act. This is the pattern our mind follows. When we face something we have never experienced (like an active shooter) we will quite possibly freeze up because our mind is stuck on "observe" or "orient" but we've never trained to "decide" and then "act."

Same goes for the shooter. He finally breaks through the barricade and enters the room, but as soon as he gets through the door he is hit by numerous flying objects coming at him (books, phones, coffee cups). What is his natural reaction? Flinch. Move his hands up to protect himself.

That is when we swarm him and take him down to the ground. The instructor showed us how to do it, and we practiced it many times (sometimes without the "shooter" knowing that we were going to fight back). This tactic definitely works. Then you hold him down until the police arrive.

7 Tips to Defend Yourself Against a Knife-Wielding Attacker
Jake Ryker was shot in the chest at a high school shooting in 1998. Amazingly, he got up and tackled the shooter and held him down until help arrived. (Ryker later joined the Marines and served well.)

What do you do? Counter. Throw. Tackle. Yell. Strike. Something to disorient the shooter and throw him off ... or you will most surely be shot and probably die.

And what do you do with the gun? Put it in a trashcan. If you are holding it over the attacker, the police may not know you are the "good guy" — and you may get shot.

Evacuate. Know where all the exits are (not just doors, how about windows?). The bad guy cannot shoot you if you are not there. If you have a bunch of kids with you, tell them to run for it — and scatter. You can find them later. DON'T tell them to stay in one place. If you are in a hospital or nursing home, obviously many of the people cannot get away. Your best option is lockdown and counter.

When you get in your car and drive to work, you perform hundreds of complex skills to get yourself there. You are not even conscious of it, probably. You have developed "unconscious competence," because you have done it over and over again. When it comes to protecting yourself against active shooters, your school or business should conduct these drills on a regular basis.

You have regular fire drills, right? Do these drills too. The body cannot go where the mind has never been. Take your mind and body on these drills and practice. And learn how to save lives. Have ALICE instructors come to your business or school. To find out more about ALICE Training, go to www.alicetraining.com.
 
...sounds basically like the react to close ambush drill.
 
"Know where all the exits are (not just doors, how about windows?)."

Always good advice.

"6 Things You Can Do to Disarm the Shooter if You're Ever Involved in an Orlando-Style Attack"

The Pulse nightclub was an active shooter. But, murder by arson is also something to consider.

Regarding nightclubs. They can be death-traps,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_nightclub_fires

Some may be over-capacity. Be prepared for locked and hidden emergency exits. Emergency lighting may, or may not, work.
They are dark to begin with. For sure there will be drunks and knocked over tables and chairs getting in your way.






 
Infanteer said:
...sounds basically like the react to close ambush drill.

Swarming the attacker has worked to an extent in at least two real word situations. The passengers in United 93 managed to break into the cockpit, but were unable to save themselves and the airplane (but did prevent another deadly suicide attack), and three people rushed a would be attacker on a French train and took him down, despite being in the most disadvantageous position imaginable, being funnelled down a single avenue of approach.

Our model should be pack of sheepdogs taking down a wolf.
 
Infanteer said:
...sounds basically like the react to close ambush drill.

Yes it does, and they do work.
 
Thucydides said:
a different way to look at dealing with Active Shooters:

https://pjmedia.com/lifestyle/2017/07/14/everything-you-think-you-know-about-an-active-shooter-situation-is-wrong/

I've been trying to point this out to the teachers at my kids' school and they clearly have no idea what I'm talking about, and think I'm kinds crazy (they might be right!).

Run, Hide, Fight should be the SOP, not 'cower until killed'.
 
Thucydides said:
Swarming the attacker has worked to an extent in at least two real word situations. The passengers in United 93 managed to break into the cockpit, but were unable to save themselves and the airplane (but did prevent another deadly suicide attack), and three people rushed a would be attacker on a French train and took him down, despite being in the most disadvantageous position imaginable, being funnelled down a single avenue of approach.

Or this guy taking on 3 attackers.
https://www.google.ca/amp/www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/london-bridge-attack-roy-larner-father-fight-terrorists-borough-market-stabbing-hero-southwark-a7773841.html%3Famp


Our model should be pack of sheepdogs taking down a wolf.

Or a pack of wolves taking on a coyote? 
 
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