EXACTLY!para driver wrote:I retract my previous question.. training to reload is probably a good thing, as I doubt anyone counts how many rounds they fired under that kind of stress.. was it 2, 5 or 7??? RELOAD...

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
EXACTLY!para driver wrote:I retract my previous question.. training to reload is probably a good thing, as I doubt anyone counts how many rounds they fired under that kind of stress.. was it 2, 5 or 7??? RELOAD...
This is precisely why I believe critiquing these things is so important. I hadn't thought much about doing a tactical reload. I concidered the IPDA practice of it silly. After reading the discussion in this thread. I see it from a different perspective. It isn't just the LEO types that add something to these discussions. even though we depend on their input and expertise.para driver wrote:I retract my previous question.. training to reload is probably a good thing, as I doubt anyone counts how many rounds they fired under that kind of stress.. was it 2, 5 or 7??? RELOAD...
When I worked as a paramedic in Albuquerque, we responded to a shooting call that turned out to be a drug deal gone bad. Guy on the ground had...are you ready for this?...26 9mm slugs in him, including a minimum of 14 that were mid-torso, COM shots.RubenZ wrote:I'd like to find out where the BG was shoot.
I just can't see someone still alive if all shots were in chest area. It just aint gonna happen.
packina40 wrote:When I worked as a paramedic in Albuquerque, we responded to a shooting call that turned out to be a drug deal gone bad. Guy on the ground had...are you ready for this?...26 9mm slugs in him, including a minimum of 14 that were mid-torso, COM shots.RubenZ wrote:I'd like to find out where the BG was shoot.
I just can't see someone still alive if all shots were in chest area. It just aint gonna happen.
Story we got was that the shooter RELOADED and fired a second magazine into the guy from a standing directly over him position once he went down.
It was definitely touch and go...he coded once in the ambulance, once in the ER and again in surgery...but ultimately survived.