Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Criminals fear armed citizens more than they fear cops

John Stossel had a report on guns and included the fact that inmates are more afraid of citizens who are armed than they are of cops, simply because they know instantly more often than not who the cops are. The portion on guns starts at 5:05, he interviews inmates at 6:30 and talks about what they are afraind of at 7:15.

This reminds me of a story I recently read at the following link:

I ran into a kid at the carwash this past Saturday, I remember him and his brother from church when they were ankle-biters. Sadly both this guy and his brother ended up doing time in the state pokey (His brother is actually back in) while he has turned his life around. He recognized me and came up to start chatting- saw my sidearm and asked what I was carrying these days. Spent a few minutes talking about my firearm and he says, "you know, guys like my brother fear people like you."

I said, "armed people?"

He said, "no, armed people who don't bother covering it up."

I asked, "Why not just regular armed people?"

He said, "can't tell who is strapped and who isn't. Someone carrying concealed looks just like everyone else. See, when guys like him case a joint, they make sure that everything is in place. As soon as they see someone with a piece hangin' off their belt it messes with their rhythm. That throws them off and makes them shaky."

Then he said something that has stuck with me since, "my brother said it took him almost a week to get the picture of a guy with a gun out of his mind before he got the nerve up to go rob another store. It really freaked him out because it reminded him that there were people out there with guns that could shoot back."

I said (in my most sarcastic voice), "you can't tell me a hardened criminal is actually scared of a private citizen with a handgun."

His answer? "Thugs ain't no heroes... too lazy and it takes a lot of energy to get nerve up to go somewhere and do it. If you mess with that flow they gotta wait until they get jacked up enough to do it again. Could take a few minutes or a few days, but they won't go back to where they know somebody's packin'"

Thought provoking conversation. I just hope this kid has learned his lesson and stays out of trouble.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Use a password on your cellphones

In California, they have already allowed police officers on routine traffic stops to be able to take a cell phone phone and search through it for any incriminating evidence of any wrong-doing. And since my policy is to listen to the experts (lawyers and cops) when they say to never talk to the police, it stands to reason that I should also limit their access to my cell phone. Sure, this law is not in my home state, but it could come up.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

You can’t win if you can’t hit

Found this article in an online forum that did not supply the original link to where it came from. However, I am posting it here simply because it is a very good article. And since I am very pro-self defense, it is imperative that if you own a gun that you can fire the gun safely and accurately during moments of crisis.

One of the first skills to degrade under stress is trigger control. One of the biggest problem facing shooters is learning how to control and manipulate the trigger under tight time limits and stress, both in qualification courses and on the street.

Trigger control is composed of two parts—mental control and physical manipulation. On the mental side, control of emotions and arousal comes into play. On the physical side, learning how to manipulate the trigger correctly keeps us in control at higher rates of shooting speed.

The arousal level necessary for fast precise shooting is a lot lower than that needed for most physical confrontations. I refer to this type of arousal as “calm or cold aggression.” You are definitely determined, confident and focused; you just need to stay a lot calmer while doing so. This involves a lot of specific training to develop this mindset and is beyond the scope of this article.

Trigger Manipulation Concepts
No matter how you choose to manipulate the trigger, the number one thing you must learn to do is to isolate the action of the trigger finger. This is part mental control and part physical manipulation.

Two things make this difficult.

1.) The shooter must deal with noise and recoil at the end of the trigger press. This leads to anticipation of recoil and noise and a subsequent flinching response while manipulating the trigger.
2.) The faster you go, the greater your tendency to move other fingers while you manipulate the trigger.

In order to deal with the first problem, I was taught the concept of “surprise break” when I was learning how to shoot. The theory is that you keep adding pressure to the trigger until the firearm discharged and you didn’t know the exact moment the shot would break. This was supposed to help with the anticipation problem. The difficulty with the theory is that in a very short time, the shooter knows pretty much when the gun is going to go off and starts to react to the anticipated recoil at the moment they are finishing the press.

I have moved away from the “surprise break” concept in favor of teaching my students to learn to accept recoil. The outcome is the same, not disturbing the sight alignment and sight picture, but the methodology is different.

Trigger Isolation
I have devoted a great deal of time to study and research on how to teach high level defensive shooting for those wishing to pursue higher levels of excellence. The Skills Hierarchy© is one of the new concepts to come out of this research.

Before you can precisely isolate the trigger, the shooter has to have a feeling in the mind that they are in control of the shooting grip and the gun will not slip in the hand while it is recoiling. Also in the mind is the feeling that the recoil cycle is smooth without a violent flip of the slide. Only then will the shooter be able to relax, isolate excessive tension, and be able to focus precisely on the manipulation of the trigger at higher speeds. The shooting grip is “alive” in that it will respond to inputs from the brain and the firearm. The key is to build awareness and skill in processing what is really going on and how to make it work for you.

We just finished a couple of instructor schools with some advanced instructors from the US Border Patrol and FLETC at the NRA Whittington Center in Raton, NM. During the courses, we explored the Skills Hierarchy on a variety of levels with different topics and specifically explored trigger control and manipulation.

What was amazing to me was the amount and speed of learning when things are done at the correct level of the hierarchy in the correct sequence of training. Bad habits that had been built over many years were corrected and students remarked on how much more they had learned about their shooting that they did not realize they did not know.

These were not basic instructors with only a few years on the job. They were advanced level trainers.

Concepts
Most instructors use ball and dummy drills to show the student their flinch and help them become aware of it. What I have found is that while ball and dummy drills may help identify flinch, they do not of themselves correct flinch. The student’s mind must be reprogrammed with a different way of thinking, believing and dealing with recoil and noise.

Simply put, these reactions are tied to the survival reflexes. When you KNOW you have a live round in the chamber you must be able to deal psychologically with the effects of noise, recoil and muzzle blast on a level that allows you to still isolate the trigger.

Getting Started
In order to better isolate the trigger, you must first have control of the handgun as well as proper balance. A proper grip allows the hands and the handgun to move as a unit, without slipping, through the recoil cycle. Proper balance allows the body to relax and compensate for the effects of recoil without tensing up or moving. The proper balance for shooting is with the center of gravity slightly forward.

Proper control of both the grip and balance allows the shooter to acclimate to recoil and muzzle rise and start to relax mentally and physically. In doing so, the brain is reprogrammed not to become alarmed when the gun is fired.

Further acclimation can occur in relation to noise and muzzle blast if you let yourself shoot the gun below eye level at a safe backstop. Just look at the backstop and shoot. Then look at the gun and shoot without blinking. George Harris from the SIG SAUER Academy will have the student look at the gun from each side while shooting it to help them acclimate. George and I have similar thoughts when it comes to teaching acclimation before teaching other components of marksmanship.

As the shooter learns to relax, isolate tension and let recoil happen, the capacity to isolate the trigger will increase.

Excessive/violent muzzle rise and a loss of friction between the hand and the handgun will invariable result in tightening the grip as you press the trigger. This results in muzzle movement and a change in point of impact. Whatever type of shooting stance or grip you are currently doing, staying consistent on grip pressure will lead to much more shooting success.

Here are some tips that will help you become a more consistent shooter.

Exercise #1
With either your empty firearm or a blue gun, establish your shooting grip and, while holding the grip firmly, have another person hold the firearm behind the muzzle with one hand and give a tug on your support hand with the other hand using approximately 20 lbs. of force to see if it comes loose. The goal is to create enough pressure and friction to keep the support hand firmly connected to the gun.

Exercise #2
After completing exercise 1, establish your shooting grip. Without changing grip tension, dry fire the handgun. Hold the grip pressure the same before, during and for three seconds after you have finished pressing the trigger. Repeat a minimum of 25 times.

Exercise #3
Once you develop a feel for keeping constant grip pressure, do it with live fire, paying particular attention to keeping grip tension the same as you finish trigger press and after the shot is fired.

These simple exercises, done correctly, will result in a much more educated trigger press which will increase your precision at speed and distance.

Try them out and let me know how it works for you!

Saturday, October 1, 2011

A text book way to control a combative suspect

This video shows how using the Carotid Restraint is effective and easy to use without causing any injury to the suspect or the officer. Even though these guys are security they did a very good job on controlling the suspect. Now to get officers to use this instead of other approaches that could easily be construed as "brutality".

Friday, September 30, 2011

Another story of a bad cop

See, I don't have a problem with officers making mistakes. Getting too emotionally charged and snapping. I mean, they ARE people, and people have the tendency to overreact at times. I would like to see that officers are appropriately screened in order to weed out such people from such civic duty, but it can happen to anyone. But what pisses me off at police as a whole is when, after making a mistake, the officer in question lies about it. I have a strong suspicion that most people feel the same way as I do: that a mistake, even one that involves physical harm, might be excused by the general public (and by that I do not mean no discipline, just that the general public might not hate cops so much) if the officer were to come straight out and say "I am guilty. I screwed up. I apologise for my actions." This doesn't happen though. Officers seem to have a disposition to lie about what their mistakes and wrongdoing, and other officers back them up.

Just to showcase this line of thought, the story below contains a video where it shows a citizen speaking to an officer and then out of the blue, the officer punches the guy in the face, then punches him some more when the guy is down. It took first-hand viewing of the tape for the prosecutors to drop the charges because the officer was stating that the citizen was the one to attack him!

http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/dpp/news/the_edge/video-shows-detroit-police-officer-beating-man-at-mgm-casino
The officer, however, claims Poisson made the first move. He was facing charges, but they were eventually dropped. "As soon as the prosecutor's office saw the videotape, the charges disappeared," said Mueller.
Poisson is now suing the department for money, as well as the officer's resignation.
It is stories like these that help the general public believe that cops are criminals (and in this case, this officer was since he blatantly lied about what happened). And if you watch the video in the link provided above, you will see that the cop was not alone. What did the other officer do? Tell the prosecutors and his chief what really happened? Doesn't seem that that is the case.

I honestly want cops to be the good guys, but with so many incidents lately that are showing how bad the cops are... it is easy to see why the public opinion of cops is so bad.

Some statistics, and why you should Openly Carry a firearm

According to Armed and Considered Dangerous: A Survey of Felons and Their Firearms, James Wright and Peter Rossi, Aldine, 1986 about 60% of convicted felons said they purposely avoided targets they knew to be armed. The same study showed that 40% admitted to avoiding someone they thought might be armed. It seems to me the criminals are more afraid of open carry than concealed carry.

According to, The Armed Criminal in America: A Survey of Incarcerated Felons, U.S. Bureau of Justice StatisticsFederal Firearms Offenders study, 1997: National Institute of Justice, Research Report, July 1985,Department of Justice 57% of felons said they are more worried about running in to armed citizens than cops.

In other words the studies show that criminals avoid those that can fight back with a weapon. They avoid the hard targets. They don't hide in bushes and wait to attack them in hopes of stealing their weapon. This "target me" myth is not based in the evidence of real world studies. It just doesn't pan out based on what is known of criminal behavior.

According to a study done in Missouri 2% of civillian shootings kill an innocent person. The tally for police officers came out to 11%. According to, Geller & Karales, "Shootings of and By Chicago Police: Uncommon Crises, Part I: Shootings by Chicago Police," Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 1813 (1981) 14% of lethal force incidents by Chicago police officers were "prima facie cases of manslaughter or murder."

Even the FBI admits that criminals don't OC & practically never use holsters.
The study was called "Violent Encounters: A Study of Felonious Assaults on Our Nation's Law Enforcement Officers".
Published in 2006; PDFs available here.
Chapter 4 is where they talk about criminals, OC, & holsters.


So if you see a citizen with a pistol in a holster, you can be pretty sure they're not planning to cause trouble.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Conceal and carry has led to more car break-ins

President of the Missouri Fraternal Order of Police Kevin Ahlbrand is a detective with St. Louis Metro P.D. He says conceal and carry has led to more car break-ins, especially where guns aren’t allowed in — such as at churches and sporting events.
This coming from a new article about assults against police on the rise. While it is interesting to note that break-ins are on the rise in areas where guns are not allowed, criminals don't want to get shot after all, it is more distressing to see that cops are being assulted at a higher rate.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Complaining outloud

Someone I know had this to say about a recent event:

I was standing on my porch one day and happened to say, while laughing 'I'd like to punch So-and-So in the nose', which is equivalent to 'give a piece of my mind', or 'kick someone's hind end', but just so happened that the child of this person who irked me was walking by when I said it (having been asked).

In about 20 minutes two cops showed up and wanted to talk to me. I was aghast. I said 'what's the problem? People say 'punch in the nose' all the time meaning they're irked. It doesn't mean actually hitting a person, or even threatening to hit someone, give me a break'.

They said 'Well since you said it standing on your porch, and we didn't hear you, we won't arrest you, but if you'd been standing in the street and said it we'd arrest you for threatening someone'. (Ri-i-i-ght!).

I said 'well, it was a figure of speech, but if you like I'll apologize to everyone involved, I definitely do NOT plan to go punch anyone AND I didn't say it to THEM I said it to another person who was grousing also and their kid overheard it'.

I am not positive how often this might happen with people, at least saying such things about someone else on your own property, but it does happen. And no matter what your intentions, you can be arrested for scenarios like the above. At the very least, for stating a desire to offer violence against another, one could be arrested for simple assault. At the worst, well, possibly even for making terrorist threats.
Now, there are some technicalities regarding if you made the statement in the presence of an officer or not, but that gets into being arrested on the spot or being arrested after the person you threatened obtained a warrant.

Your right to free speech actually ends a bit before the other person's nose.

While I agree that merely expressing a desire to do something, as opposed to actually stating your intent to do the act, should not be a criminal offense, this is the world that we live in. You have to take precautions about what you say, not only against what you do or do not say in the presence of an officer, but you have to watch what you say whenever anyone can overhear your words.

Remember your rights, but more importantly, remember the rights of others as well (which is something that I feel that the majority of people do not do).

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Officers are the same, but different, than regular people (or why shouldn't you carry a non-lethal self-defence item)

In an article in The Brownfield Herald titled "In police shootings, officers held to same laws as public" the author notes that
Each department's policy on use of force against a suspect varies slightly, said McAllen police Chief Victor Rodriguez. But officers are held liable under the same laws as the public.

"We're subject to the law that applies to everybody," Rodriguez said. "It doesn't matter if you're a police officer or a citizen. A person can use force."


while also showing that officers are not the same as a normal citizen with
Harlingen police have not released the name of the officer who fired on Rivas or said why he chose his shotgun instead of his Taser during the deadly Monday night incident.

The man is currently on leave from his duties, while the Texas Rangers and Cameron County District Attorney's office continue to investigate. The evidence is expected to be turned over to a grand jury for consideration.

Friday, September 23, 2011

If you point a gun, toy or real, expect to get shot

The following story shows an officer doing what anyone would do in a similar situation

Man with toy gun shot, killed by police in Fla.

NORTH MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A man whose family said he was autistic was killed by police in North Miami Beach after pointing a real-looking toy gun at an officer, police said Thursday.
Police officers responded to 911 calls about a man seen walking around the neighborhood Wednesday afternoon with a rifle, North Miami Beach Police Director Thomas Carney said. Officers gave commands for the man to drop the weapon, but he refused and pointed it at an officer, Carney said.
The man identified as Ernest Vassell, 57, was carrying a realistic toy that could be confused with a rifle or shotgun, police said.
"It's very tragic," Carney said. "People don't understand that police officers are going to treat you like that's a real gun until we determine differently. They're not going to take any chances."
The victim's sister said Vassell was autistic and had mental challenges.
"Ernest did not deserve to die like this. Everyone is still in shock and disbelief," Marva Vassell-Gordon said.
His neighbors said it was obvious that Ernest Vassell had a disability, and police should have known.
"It's so strange to me that I can see it, and then, the police didn't see it. Or they didn't look for it," said Conroy Anderson, a family friend.
Police were not immediately releasing further information on the shooting pending an investigation.

While I might bash a bit on cops here, I only bash on cops who are being negligent in their duties or are commiting crimes themselves. I will also gladly point it out when cops protect other cops and their crimes, for that makes them accessories. But in stories like the above, while it is rather emotional to see someone with mental learning difficulties get shot because he was only playing a game (or whatever), they did the right thing. Even myself, if I saw an adult point a gun at me, I would draw mine in response. And I would pull the trigger multiple times in order to bring the assailant down. Would I mourn the needlessness of the death? Yes. However, you cannot take the time to cross your t's and dot your i's when a gun is being pointed at you. I have to wonder what the family was thinking by letting this man walk around with such a gun. I would let my kids run around the neighborhood with their bright yellow and orange nerf guns, but I wouldn't let them do the same with their daisy bb long gun. Nor would I let them do the same with any other gun that looked too realistic.

Common sense people.

My wife and our guns

We just recieved our shotgun buttstock shell holder and our shotgun shell bandolier in the mail today, so I was able to convince my lovely wife to pose a bit for me while shooting (at the clay pigeons that were mentioned in the other day's post):





Guns shown:

Winchester 12 gauge model 370
Sig Pro sp2022 9mm
Ruger P95 9mm

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Personal rights.....taken for granted too often.

This is something I touched on in yesterday's post and is something that my wife and I talked about at length on our way home from the Wal-Mart.

How many people can you think of that could care less about the preservation of their rights? From the stereotypical thug yelling about the "5th" to the average joe who knows nothing about his 2A rights until someone breaks into his house.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

LEO stories from around the web

Kelly Thomas Death: Officer Manuel Ramos Charged With Murder
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -- The fatal police beating of a mentally ill, homeless man, prosecutors say, began with one officer snapping on a pair of latex gloves and a single threat.
Kelly Thomas was sitting on a curb in Southern California as police checked his backpack when Officer Manuel Ramos donned the gloves and made two fists in front of him. Prosecutors say Ramos then said: "Now see my fists? They are getting ready to F you up."
HPD punishes 7 officers for conduct in wreck
Houston police Chief Charles McClelland disciplined one of his assistant chiefs and six other police officers for their conduct after an eastside patrol sergeant allegedly crashed into a school bus while intoxicated earlier this year, HPD officials confirmed.

On Tuesday, the department said McClelland had taken disciplinary action against members of his own command staff, a rare punishment, according to Gary Blankinship, president of the Houston Police Officers' Union.
Ex-Des Moines cop charged with driving drunk in West Des Moines: W.D.M. police say former D.M. officer also had a gun.
A former Des Moines police officer who lost his job over brutality allegations was found drunk in a vehicle with a loaded gun he doesn’t have permission to carry over the weekend, West Des Moines police said.
Mersed Dautovic, 28, was found passed out in his vehicle at the stoplight at Westown Parkway and Valley West Drive at about 3:30 a.m. Saturday, according to a police report. The officer reportedly smelled a strong odor of alcohol coming from the car.
(KMOV.com) -- A Belleville, Illinois police officer is facing multiple charges after attacking a man during a call.
The incident happened on June 14 when a Belleville couple was getting threatening phone calls.  The couple called police for assistance.  They claim Officer Sean Harris came to their home, but refused to file a report.  When the couple asked for the name of the Harris' supervisor, they say he went into a rage and became violent.
The victim's wife said officer Harris attacked her husband.  The officer "grabbed him by the neck and threw him down on his back on the brick sidewalk," she said.
Milwaukee police arrest FOX6 photojournalist at the scene of house fire
FOX6 News Photojournalist Clint Fillinger went to the scene of a house fire near 27th and Townsend late Sunday. He was shooting video behind yellow police tape alongside a small crowd that gathered to watch.

At that time, Fillinger says a Milwaukee police sergeant singled him out. He says the sergeant came at him quickly. Fillinger put up his hand in a defensive move and touched the sergeant. Fillinger was then knocked to the ground, handcuffed and arrested.

Fillinger was cited for resisting and obstructing an officer. In his 45 years as a news photographer, Fillinger says nothing like this has ever happened to him before. "I kept backing up, telling him I had a right to be there," said Fillinger.

On Tuesday, Fillinger went to a medical clinic to have his injuries checked. He has no broken bones. He does have bruises around his knee along with sore muscles. Fillinger will be off work for the remainder of the week.
South Florida blogger who supports cuts to North Miami Beach Police Department budget gets racist threatening emails, 'it only takes one bullet', from the North Miami Beach Police Department.
Several days ago, Kinzle said, she received the email, which she did not publish, which lists the home addresses of two outspoken critics of the police department. "Criminals here it is ... Have fun..." the email reads. "We love our police department," she said, "don't get me wrong, but ever since this budget process started, they've been unbelievably childish, nasty, rude."

There are not only allegations of threats but racism. The writer of the email called one of the residents and critics of the police department of German heritage a Nazi and the other critic of the police department, who happens to be a muslim, "al jazerri." Kinzle said, "That's a hate crime, that's racist, in my opinion."

Police have said they are looking into it and have launched an internal affairs investigation, and they could not comment any further.
Justice Department boosts activity to police the police (this is encouraging!)
The Obama administration is ramping up civil rights enforcement against local police nationwide, opening a number of investigations to determine whether officers are guilty of brutality or discrimination against Hispanics and other minorities.

In recent months, the Justice Department has begun inquiries into major city police departments such as Portland, Ore., where officers shot several people who had mental health issues, and Seattle, where police were accused of gunning down a homeless Native American woodcarver. The department issued a scathing report earlier this month accusing Puerto Rico police of a “staggering level of crime and corruption.’’
Veteran Gardner officer charged with child rape
Landry is charged with statutory rape of a child, indecent assault and battery on a child under age 14, and assault to rape a child.

Prosecutors say the 35-year-old Landry assaulted the boy starting in kindergarten until the sixth-grade. The alleged incidents took place in Winchendon. The alleged victim came forward on Monday.

Landry has been placed on paid leave by the gardener Police department.
Ex-cop accused of lying after arguing with motorist in funeral procession
A former Chicago police officer is accused of getting into an argument with a motorist in a funeral procession, then lying during a trial and to her superiors that the motorist had hit her with a bottle.

Sylshina London, 36, has been charged with perjury. She joined the department in 2002 and resigned earlier this year as the 2010 incident was being investigated.

During the investigation by Independent Police Review Authority, authorities said they obtained police camera footage of the incident "which proved London’s claims against the woman to be false."
Case may (hopefully) end Andrew Thomas' career
"The evidence and testimony that we will present will establish a four-year period of prosecutorial abuse by Mr. Thomas and Ms. Aubuchon," said John Gleason, the attorney prosecuting the case. "Under the direction and supervision of Mr. Thomas, he and Ms. Aubuchon engaged in personal retribution against their enemies."

"If you crossed paths with the county attorney, Sheriff (Joe) Arpaio, or former (sheriff's) Chief Deputy David Hendershott, you should expect to be sued, criminally charged, or both, by the county attorney," Gleason said.

"The evidence will show that the primary purpose of the prosecutions was to punish those individuals with whom Mr. Thomas and Ms. Aubuchon disagreed."


A plea deal prosecutors say was prompted by a loophole in state law resulted in the promise of a maximum one-year jail sentence Friday for a former Anderson police officer charged with kidnapping and raping a woman he was taking to jail.
Under the plea bargain Bryan Benson pleaded no contest to assault by a public officer and soliciting a lewd act.

Benson, 27, was arrested last year after being accused of raping a Millville woman he was taking to jail. He had faced life in prison if tried and convicted of the original charges.

In addition to serving up to a year in jail he now faces formal probation for three years.

But he might be able to serve his jail sentence on electronic home confinement if he’s found eligible to do so.

After he’s served his sentence, he could petition the court to try to have his felony assault conviction reduced to a misdemeanor. He won’t have to register as a sex offender because that’s not a requirement of the misdemeanor lewd act count to which he also pleaded no contest.
SWAT Teams Execute Man's Farm Animals With Shot Guns

First MWAG

My first MWAG (Man with a gun) since I started open carrying (from here on out in this blog, I will reference open carry with OC) just a few months ago. It was not, however, a police officer that came up to me.

I was in Wal-Mart with my wife, just running errands and picking up ammo and some biodegradable clay pigeons. I was OC as usual. I tried to get my wife to OC with me on the bases that if something should happen, it is better have someone there who can back you up, but she declined on the basis that her paddle holster has not shown up yet and she hates to wear a belt in order to carry.

So, what will happen to these two cops?

In Atlanta, a police officer arrested a disabled woman who was sitting in a chair in front of her home waiting for an ice cream truck.
Walker said an Atlanta police officer approached her and told her to move. “He came right here and said we had to move, and I said ‘What reason do he have to move?’ ” Walker said. She said the officer told her, “Because I said so.” Walker claims she stood and told the officer she was going to call his supervisor.
“That’s when he grabbed me. My ice cream fell and my phone fell,” she said. Walker said that’s when the officer put her on the ground. Walker has photos of the incident. Walker said the officer sprained her shoulder in the process, and she had to be taken to Grady Memorial Hospital.
The charge was disorderly conduct. "In six months, 27 of the 38 arrests the officer made were for disorderly conduct."

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Cops

First off, you have to remember that cops have no duty to protect anyone. They are there to deter crime by their presence and to clean up the mess after a crime has been committed.

WASHINGTON, June 27 - The Supreme Court ruled on Monday that the police did not have a constitutional duty to protect a person from harm, even a woman who had obtained a court-issued protective order against a violent husband making an arrest mandatory for a violation.
via http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/politics/28scotus.html

Monday, September 19, 2011

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Whats up with my diet?

As I stated in the first post, my diet is rather strict.

It is also why the first word of this blog's title is "Caveman".

Saturday, September 17, 2011

College boy?

Not me.

How about a little backstory first, shall we? I graduated high school a semester early with a wife and a 3 month old son waiting for me to get a real job, which I did. Lived with the in-laws for a few years too, trying to save up the cash and work my way up the job ladder so I could get a loan. The joke on me was that since I didn't want to waste any money on other debts, I had a zero credit rating. Anyways, the long and the short of it is that I did purchase a home, then purchased another one last year which is where I am currently living. It's a better home than my first one, with better neighbors by far (I see more of my neighbor's yellow lab Sam and local horses in my yard than I do people).

Who Am I?

Since my life has recently been inundated with bullets, I will respond to the title question with bullets.