gemini wrote:Excaliber:Here we have a newly issued piece of equipment that requires a different mode of operation from similar gear the officer was much more familiar with, and a light activation switch that is turned on with rearward pressure applied just under the trigger guard.
Basically under-trained with the equipment in use? Result = death of suspect.
Excaliber:In the BART case, the officer had received far more training in firing his handgun than his taser, and the taser holstering system setup on his duty rig was arranged so that both the taser and the handgun would be manipulated by the same hand. The hand functions for drawing and firing both were the same. Under the stress of a struggle, while his mental decision was to draw and fire the taser, the hand assigned to that task performed the more dominant function instilled by training - drawing and firing the handgun.
Basically over-trained with the equipment in use? Result = death of suspect.
Not sure exactly what conclusion to draw.
You apparently are willing to buy both of these scenarios as presented by defense attorneys weeks or months after the incidents as factual and complete accounts of what transpired in each case. I'm not as convinced as you are, particularly with regard to the Plano case.
There is nothing about activating the SureFire light switch under the trigger guard that is any different than establishing a standard good grip on the handgun - which should certainly be the done when in close quarters with a suspect. In fact, keeping the light off takes a conscious decision to keep one finger a bit more relaxed than it would otherwise be. Gripping the gun properly is not a cause of negligent discharge, whether there's a switch under one of the fingers around the handgun's grip or not.
Front strap mounted light switches of varying types have been in use for at least 40 years and are currently used in the top of the line Crimson Trace laser grips. They have never, to my knowledge, been alleged to have contributed to a negligent discharge before. Nothing in the information released to date indicates that there was anything special about the SureFire switch that makes it any more hazardous than the hundreds of thousands of other similar units that have been used for almost half a century.
There are two circumstances here which have not been fully explained in the information available to the public, but which may be contributing factors that would be consistent with what we've been told so far:
1. The practice of using a handgun with a mounted light as a flashlight (nonlethal) tool that causes a lethal tool (handgun) to be pointed at a person when that action may not be fully justified. This is a potentially negligent action, and it is unclear whether or not this was done, and whether or not the department in question trained its officers on this potentially hazardous use of their equipment.
2. Placing the finger on the trigger before a decision has been made to fire. If this were the case, consciously tightening one's grip on the gun to activate the light may well result in a contraction of the trigger finger as well, thus causing a negligent discharge. I could easily see this happening during a struggle. In this case, the primary cause is not the location of the light switch or the tightening of one's grip - it's the negligent act of placing the finger inside the trigger guard before firing is justified.
It's unknown whether or not the department in question trained its officers in the most basic safety practices designed to prevent negligent discharges, but I'd be really surprised if they hadn't. If an officer disregards this training in the field, he owns the results of his decisions in that regard.
Once again, I don't know anything more than has been released publicly about the Plano incident, and I surely don't know enough to draw any credible conclusions. I can only relate the published accounts to things I know through other experience and explore possible explanations that may stimulate some thought and discussion about how Forum members can avoid similar tragedies.
I suggest we stay tuned to the investigation to see how the facts shake out.