Quote:
Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
It is called self defense.
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What it is called in reality is liability ...
... There are a host of "causes of action" resulting from an employee of a state entity discharging a firearm or possessing a firearm that is erroneously discharged resulting in the serious bodily injury of an "innocent" bystander .... then the individual employee is personally liable apart from the "employer" if the individual employee was acting in a manner inconsistent with the employer's policies regarding the conduct ....
someone (may be you) mentioned the teacher keeping her "defensive" weapon in a "clutch" purse (concealed, I assume) ... and where is she going to keep the purse between classroom assaults? Locked in a drawer?
School districts are constantly concerned about liability resulting from the actions and inactions of their employees, and if school districts are unwilling or unable to TRAIN 2-4 officers per school to handle an intruder with firearms and body armour plus provide the technology to keep eyes on the facility and the perimeter to keep unwanted or unknown intruders from entering the property, then school districts clearly will not pay for 50 teachers and staff in each school to do the same .... and that WILL BE THEIR OBLIGATION ...
....the fallacy is too much testosterone on this board concluding that all one has to do is be handed a pistol and the someone is ready, willing, and able to confront a deranged intruder with firearms and body armour and successfully defend 20-30 children in a classroom without any of them getting hurt while "putting down" the intruder.
I recognize that it is unpopular in a locker room, tailgating, internet environment, but CHL qualifications are totally inadequate to qualify ANYONE, much less a 25-year-old 2nd grade teacher, who more than likely never held a firearm of ANY KIND, to engage a a deranged intruder with firearms and body armour and successfully defend 20-30 children in a classroom without any of them getting hurt while "putting down" the intruder.
Texas has one of the highest rated peace officer licensing qualification standards in the country and academy graduates who pass the licensing exam are sought after all over this country in various agencies .... but those standards for basic peace officers are ALSO totally inadequate to train a newbie peace officer to engage a deranged intruder with firearms and body armour and successfully defend 20-30 children in a classroom without any of them getting hurt while "putting down" the intruder. And the Texas Basic Peace Officer standards of training in a police academy are 10 to 15 times more intensive in quality and quantity than the Texas CHL qualification classes.
The "want-a-be" security officer pushed up front as the "poster child" for arming school teachers to confront an intruder is .... unfortunately for those touting the guy as a hero ...
actually a "poster child" for NOT ARMING amatuers in a live fire situation with overwhelming fire power .... he DID NOT TAKE A SHOT while the guy was clearing his rifle and hid in a store leaving his female companion and her child to fend for themselves .... then later claims that he was responsible for scaring the guy to death! The "want-a-be's" weapon of choice to defend himself and his gf and the Mall customers?
.... a .22 Glock!!!!! His grasp of reality under fire.
I would be willing to bet any CHL holder on this board that their customary loads in their customary carry weapon is IMPROPER for indoor, close range confrontations in a crowded environment ... and just be honest..... because when you have to testify as to what "happened" when you discharge your weapon you will have to explain your choice as it relates to the shooting environment in which you draw your weapon and your decision making in that instant you decide to "shoot" or "don't shoot" under the existing circumstances. That "instant" will consume probably two to three hours of direct and cross-examination in which physics (science) and geometry will be a major factor.
Lay that on a 2nd grade art teacher.