Re: How Do You Stop a Crazed Gunman?
Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 1:55 pm
Probably more than there has been in the situations where 1 person has a gun and no one else does. As we have seen from the absurdly high death tolls.
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Augustus Maximus wrote:Probably more than there has been in the situations where 1 person has a gun and no one else does. As we have seen from the absurdly high death tolls.
Gypsys Kiss wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Until police response time is 5 seconds or until there is a government person with a gun on every street corner, we are just gonna have to wait until the gunman runs out of bullets.
You stop a crazed gunman by shooting him
You are in a crowded street with 200 like minded individuals, someone pulls a gun, someone else screams "he's got a gun", the gunman fires, 199 people draw their Desert Eagles.......
How many survivors will there be?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Augustus Maximus wrote:Probably more than there has been in the situations where 1 person has a gun and no one else does. As we have seen from the absurdly high death tolls.
and how often do those incidents happen? Also, again, is arming everyone really the best way to prevent these tragedies?
Phatscotty wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Augustus Maximus wrote:Probably more than there has been in the situations where 1 person has a gun and no one else does. As we have seen from the absurdly high death tolls.
and how often do those incidents happen? Also, again, is arming everyone really the best way to prevent these tragedies?
How often do bystanders get hit by police or citizen fire is the more relevant question. I've never heard a story like that, that's why your question is unreasonable, to me anyways.
DirtyDishSoap wrote:Could just make guns legal so if someone decides to go on a crazed massacre he'll be reminded at least a good portion of that said crowd will be carrying something.
Case closed, next.
Metsfanmax wrote:I think Phatscotty wants us to admit that we would rather have some innocent people die in tragedies like these, if it meant saving more lives in the long run because of the collective sum of individual events (like people breaking into homes) that result in gun deaths. Fine, I'm totally willing to admit that if the data supports it.
Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I think Phatscotty wants us to admit that we would rather have some innocent people die in tragedies like these, if it meant saving more lives in the long run because of the collective sum of individual events (like people breaking into homes) that result in gun deaths. Fine, I'm totally willing to admit that if the data supports it.
innocent people are all that have died in these tragedies. Should they be protected or should not they?
I would bet money that from now on there will always be someone with a gun on the island.
safariguy5 wrote:There are survival techniques to escape a gunman, stay low, try to move behind obstacles, zig zag your flight path.
safariguy5 wrote:There are survival techniques to escape a gunman, stay low, try to move behind obstacles, zig zag your flight path.
Baron Von PWN wrote:Ok scotty. You say the best way to stop someone on a shooting rampage is for some bystander to have a gun and shoot the rampager. What I would like to know is if there is a single documented case where nut job starts a shooting rampage but is put down by a civilian bystander who happened to have a gun. I seriously curious to see if you have more than bluster to back up your claims.
A 25-year-old man who recently landed a new job at Ameriprise Financial and was engaged to be married was shot to death in his south Minneapolis home overnight, and police tracked a bloody trail from the crime scene in pursuit of the killer.
Shea Stremcha may have been killed after interrupting a burglarybut Police Sgt. Stephen McCarty said that "at this point in the investigation it is too early to rule out all other possible motives."
Police were called to the home, on 45th Avenue and just north of E. Lake Street, shortly after 3 a.m. Wednesday. Stremcha was dead by the time police arrived. No arrests have been made.
"People need to know that he was taken way too soon," said Alex Albers, a longtime buddy of Stremcha's who grew up with him in Northfield. "He had everything going for him."
Stremcha and his wife-to-be had moved into the home within the past year. The neighborhood of well-tended bungalows sits just two blocks off West River Parkway. Neighbors said they rarely have any serious crime.
On Wednesday morning, a law-enforcement bloodhound followed a trail of red drops from the home's side door, through the back yard and north through the alley. Police used ultraviolet lights in an effort to track the blood, and they removed the side door and boarded up the home.
"It's weird because I just met him," said Ashley Crain, who lives two doors north of the killing. "We were sleeping and our neighbor was getting murdered."
"They seemed like real sweethearts," Jerry Wehrley, another neighbor, said of Stremcha and his fiancee. "We're pretty spooked."
Albers, who now lives in Breckenridge, Colo., said he last saw his school friend when Stremcha headed out west to visit and go skiing.
"He was always a little smarter than me so I figured if I hung out with him I would end up doing better in school," said Albers. His friend had a multitude of interests, taking up pole vaulting, alpine skiing and cross-country running in high school. Stremcha also loved motorcycles, Albers said. He was a painter, and earned a bachelor's degree in art in 2008 at St. John's University in Collegeville, Minn.
"He was always kind of a jokester and upbeat. He could get along with anybody," said Jessica Wildes, an art student at the College of St. Benedict who shared several classes with Stremcha.
After college, Stremcha began looking for something more financially stable, said Albers, and eventually landed an interview at Ameriprise.
"He got the interview and the next day he was telling me how excited he was to get going on the job," Albers recalled.
Stremcha started working there about a year ago, said Ameriprise spokesman Benjamin Pratt. "We are deeply saddened by this tragedy," Pratt said. "Our thoughts are with Shea's family." Anyone with information about the killing should call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).
Paul Walsh • 612-673-4482
Matt McKinney • 612-217-1747
DirtyDishSoap wrote:Could just make guns legal so if someone decides to go on a crazed massacre he'll be reminded at least a good portion of that said crowd will be carrying something.
DirtyDishSoap wrote:Case closed, next.
Don't expect this to be answered. Especially when I have presented a prominent recent case in which the opposite happened. Not only did the armed civilian in Arizona not shoot, he nearly shot the wrong person:Baron Von PWN wrote:Ok scotty. You say the best way to stop someone on a shooting rampage is for some bystander to have a gun and shoot the rampager. What I would like to know is if there is a single documented case where nut job starts a shooting rampage but is put down by a civilian bystander who happened to have a gun. I seriously curious to see if you have more than bluster to back up your claims.
GreecePwns wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:Ok scotty. You say the best way to stop someone on a shooting rampage is for some bystander to have a gun and shoot the rampager. What I would like to know is if there is a single documented case where nut job starts a shooting rampage but is put down by a civilian bystander who happened to have a gun. I seriously curious to see if you have more than bluster to back up your claims.
Don't expect this to be answered. Especially when I have presented a prominent recent case in which the opposite happened. Not only did the armed civilian in Arizona not shoot, he nearly shot the wrong person:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41018893/ns ... wrong-man/
GreecePwns wrote:Don't expect this to be answered. Especially when I have presented a prominent recent case in which the opposite happened. Not only did the armed civilian in Arizona not shoot, he nearly shot the wrong person:Baron Von PWN wrote:Ok scotty. You say the best way to stop someone on a shooting rampage is for some bystander to have a gun and shoot the rampager. What I would like to know is if there is a single documented case where nut job starts a shooting rampage but is put down by a civilian bystander who happened to have a gun. I seriously curious to see if you have more than bluster to back up your claims.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41018893/ns ... wrong-man/
Phatscotty wrote:Yes. I tried looking for it the other day. It was fairly recent, I think it was a Florida school council, where some guy with a gun was chiding the council and holding them hostage, and some dude in the back crept in the room and shot the gunman in the leg, and the gunman managed to lunge at his target still and pop off a couple shots but the hero shot him again,and no innocent people died. It happens from time to time. I think the gunman might have lived, or maybe the guy shot himself? I can't remember but you can bet when it happens it does not get national headlines. I know it was shown in this forum.
PLAYER57832 wrote:safariguy5 wrote:There are survival techniques to escape a gunman, stay low, try to move behind obstacles, zig zag your flight path.
Yeah, play dead... etc. Kids tried them. Kids still died. A lot of those things don't work when you are swimming. And, a lot of those things don't work when you are a paniced teenager.
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Yes. I tried looking for it the other day. It was fairly recent, I think it was a Florida school council, where some guy with a gun was chiding the council and holding them hostage, and some dude in the back crept in the room and shot the gunman in the leg, and the gunman managed to lunge at his target still and pop off a couple shots but the hero shot him again,and no innocent people died. It happens from time to time. I think the gunman might have lived, or maybe the guy shot himself? I can't remember but you can bet when it happens it does not get national headlines. I know it was shown in this forum.
In that case, it was a security guard who wounded the gunman. You know, someone whose job it is to save people.
safariguy5 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:safariguy5 wrote:There are survival techniques to escape a gunman, stay low, try to move behind obstacles, zig zag your flight path.
Yeah, play dead... etc. Kids tried them. Kids still died. A lot of those things don't work when you are swimming. And, a lot of those things don't work when you are a paniced teenager.
I'm just saying, it is possible to cut down on the body count without pulling out guns and trying to kill the shooter. Obviously it won't work in all cases, but there are methods to increase survival rates.
