Parking Lot Tactics

Greg Ellifritz recently wrote an excellent article about mitigating the risks we encounter every time we go into a parking lot.  https://www.activeresponsetraining.net/five-parking-lot-precautions  It’s great advice; much like my own protocols that I developed after LCDR Schaufelberger was assassinated in his car in El Salvador. https://thetacticalprofessor.net/2018/05/25/in-memoriam-albert-schaufelberger/

Two points in particular resonated with me. First,

Walk against traffic going to and from your car.  …  You may also be able to detect the driver distracted by texting or scrolling the internet on his phone before he runs you down as well.

Every time you go into a parking lot, you will see people who simply cannot put their cell phones down for ONE Minute between their cars and the store. As soon as they get out of the car, they start texting or talking, completely obvious to the two ton homicide machines moving all around them. When they leave the store, they continue blabbing even while they’re backing out of their parking space and driving down the lane.

The title of Colonel Rex Applegate’s most famous book Kill Or Be Killed comes to mind. Such people are ready and willing to kill you as they distractedly put their manslaughter machines in motion or they’re ready to be killed while yapping about something of no importance.

By walking against the traffic, you’ll have more chance to see the distracted driver before they run you down and then say “I’m so sorry” while you’re leaking and being loaded in the ambulance aka ‘amber lamps.’ https://youtu.be/53Bx5PLrOIk?si=zCk8BcJyDLOVFUS0&t=173 Note: in the first part of the video there “may be strong language used by those shown in the video. Viewer discretion is advised, especially for young children and sensitive viewers.”

The second point that resonated with me was:

If I do carry a shopping bag, I always carry it in my non-dominant hand.  I like to keep my gun hand free for a faster draw should I decide I want to respond with my weapon.

I disagree with Greg about this. My comment on his Patreon page  https://www.patreon.com/posts/five-parking-lot-138083166  was:

One point of difference. I carry the bag in my Primary Hand. During 10 years (around 400 iterations) as a role player in Force on Force scenarios, we never saw any clients drop something in their Support Hand when they were forced by the scenario into shooting. Even Rogers Advanced Level shooters would shoot Primary Hand Only. Same thing for less skilled shooters. That observation changed my mind about how to set myself up for success.

Parking lots are spaces in-between other places of relatively greater safety. Ramp up your level of awareness for two minutes when you drive into the parking lot and when you leave the store to exit the parking lot.

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https://www.patreon.com/TacticalProfessor

The Evolution of Police Revolver Training

#wheelgunwednesday

Looking at the history of POlice training and how it began ….

Police revolver training goes back to the 19th Century and President Theodore Roosevelt. Before he was President of the United States, he was President of the New York City Police Commission from 1895 to 1897. When he began that position, New York policemen furnished their own revolvers for duty. Roosevelt was impressed by the .32 Colt New Police revolver and ordered 4500 to be issued to the New York police. Being dismayed by the lack of proficiency of the officers, Roosevelt instituted a school of pistol practice. He required officers, or ‘roundsmen,’ as they were called, to practice and qualify with their issued revolvers.

https://www.shootingillustrated.com/content/the-evolution-of-law-enforcement-revolver-training/

Small Gun Accuracy

#mousegunmonday

The Washington State Basic Covert Carry/Off-Duty Proficiency Course for Law Enforcement Officers includes shots out to 15 yards. This is perfectly workable with small guns like a Ruger LCP, even though it has a double action trigger.

Here’s my YouTube video of the Course of Fire.

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https://www.patreon.com/TacticalProfessor

Man Shot by Deputy after Calling 911

#NegativeOutcome

After a Defensive Gun Use, don’t have your gun in hand when the POlice arrive.

[After the man called 911 saying he had killed someone,] The Ventura County Sheriff’s Office arrived at the man’s home in the 4300 block of Central Avenue in Camarillo around 12:30 p.m. on Thursday, July 31. The 79-year-old man was allegedly armed with a gun and the dispatcher, who was still on the line, had asked the elderly man to step out of the house.

The man was allegedly still armed and behaved in a ‘threatening matter,’ prompting one of the deputies to shoot him, according to the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office.

https://www.foxla.com/news/california-man-79-calls-911-say-he-killed-someone-gets-shot-deputy-home-officials

Most likely after a Defensive Gun Use, a person is going to be very excited. Plan ahead of time to put your gun down before exposing yourself to the POlice. In my first class with John Farnam, he advised us to say “You might want to look over there” and point to your gun that’s in a recognizable place. Probably best for it to be unloaded to preclude the possibility of an Unintentional Discharge.

This type of incident falls into the Negative Outcome category of Undesirable Police Involvement. https://store.payloadz.com/go/?id=2617872

I had a different idea for #fridayfundamentals today but not getting shot is definitely fundamental.

If you are interested in more in-depth commentary about shooting and Personal Protection incident analysis, please consider subscribing to my Patreon page. https://www.patreon.com/TacticalProfessor

My Favorite Pressure Testing Drill

This is an old post of mine on Facebook from 2013. It was reposted today by my friends Phil Wong and Rob Reed. My thanks to them for resurrecting it. The post follows:

The concept of livefire pressure testing one’s shooting skills came up on a forum. This was my contribution.

My favorite drill is simple to set up but complex to administer. It requires comfort with an execution matrix to do correctly.

Conceptually, it’s best done with a group of about 2 dozen people or less. I’ve done it with 3 dozen, but it’s a lot of work.

It’s called ‘Everyone shoots against everyone.’ Using an execution matrix, I have every student shoot a short bout against every other student. Not consecutively, though. It’s not a mystery, I just run down the matrix and pair up names.

Logistically, all that’s required is two pepper poppers and two shoot boxes. The shooting is static. The drill is simple. Two shooters, two poppers, one signal. First to drive his/her popper down is the winner.

Where it gets difficult for the shooters is ramping their focus up and down over the course of an hour or so. Shooters do a lot of standing around and then get quickly called to shoot while the poppers are being reset. I do that timing deliberately.

When I did this for a large police department’s firearms instructors several years ago, their lead firearms instructor was the hands down favorite to win because he was easily the best shot in the department. However, that turned out not to be the case. He became complacent after awhile. The guys that had to shoot against him were jacked up every time. There ended up being no clear cut winner. The guys at the top of the winning curve were all reasonably proficient but not equal to him. Not surprisingly to me, the dedicated point shooters ended up at the bottom of the curve. One even told me he had decided to re-evaluate his philosophy because he got beaten so consistently.

At the end I commented that the amount of time they had to prepare for each bout after being called was similar to the amount of time they had from when they turned on their lights for a ‘routine traffic stop’ until they exited their patrol cars. Some of them do dozens of stops each day because they work traffic on the Interstate.

The psychology of approaching combat is as important as skill. Complacency, among other things, kills. After two years at Rogers, how students dealt with the problem mentally became far more interesting to me than the technique.

One of the difficulties of the Rogers Testing Program is that it requires students to take turns loading magazines, watching/evaluating someone else, and then standing and delivering. It goes on for over an hour, which is psychologically nerve racking. This evening, I was watching some footage of a huge firefight in Afghanistan and was struck at how similar the pacing was to the Testing Program at the School.

Close Quarters Handgun Training

My latest Shooting Illustrated article is posted.

https://www.shootingillustrated.com/content/close-quarters-handgun-training/

The topic is the ‘Close Quarters Handgun’ class I attended last month. It was taught by Chuck Haggard of Agile Training https://agiletactical.com/ and hosted by The Complete Combatant https://www.thecompletecombatant.com/.

Fair disclaimers up front: Chuck, Shelley, and Brian are all dear friends of mine and I didn’t pay for the class; in fact, Chuck picked up my range fee. Furthermore, I shot the class with the HK CC9 https://hk-usa.com/cc9/ that HK gave me. Chuck called it my “stubby gun,” which it is. Almost everybody else was shooting full size service pistols, most with Red Dot Sights. That said, nobody is paying me for my comments.

If you are interested in more in-depth commentary about shooting and Personal Protection incident analysis, please consider subscribing to my Patreon page. https://www.patreon.com/c/TacticalProfessor

Fraternity Picnic Shooting

https://www.wsbtv.com/news/local/man-dead-another-critical-condition-after-shooting-atlanta-park/S5TK53I65ZDJVIJYXDVXXSPSE4/

A précis of the incident:

  • Fraternity holds picnic at an Atlanta park
  • Uninvited intruder wearing ski mask crashes picnic and starts a confrontation
  • Fraternity members try to de-escalate the situation
  • Masked intruder pulls out a gun and starts shooting
  • A fraternity Brother is shot in the head and dies on scene
  • Other fraternity Brothers, who have Weapons Carry Licenses, are armed
  • They draw their guns and shoot the masked intruder
  • Intruder is neutralized with bullets and later expires in hospital

Sad that carrying a pistol has become a necessity even at a pleasant fellowship event but I’m glad the Brothers had theirs. It could have been much worse. There are a lot of emboldened wackos wandering around. The report indicated that the intruder had been walking down the sidewalk next to the park and just decided to make trouble for an unknown reason.

RIP Mr. Pearson.

Armed Citizen Scenarios

#scenariosunday

I was nostalgic today for older style IDPA Scenarios like we used to shoot in the sport’s early days. Twenty-five years ago, there wasn’t much reloading on the clock and stages often consisted of multiple strings having six shots or less. It’s a different sport now.

My nostalgia caused me to write a new stage and redesign an older one. One is based on an Armed Citizen incident and the other on an actual car burglary and murder. The stages are called the Chicargo Practical Event and Muffler Thieves.

I finished up with the Old West Shootist’s Challenge. My Little Crappy Pistol (LCP) did just fine.

It was a fun afternoon. I’m going to do it every month, as if it was my own private match.

If you are interested in more in-depth commentary about shooting and Personal Protection incident analysis, please consider subscribing to my Patreon page. https://www.patreon.com/c/TacticalProfessor

Preventing Unintentional Discharges with a Revolver

#wheelgunwednesday

In my “Off-duty Shootouts of the LAPD” presentations, one section is devoted to Notable Incidents – Unintentional Discharges. The LAPD still authorizes snub revolvers for backup and off-duty carry. Unintentional Discharges occur to both revolvers and autoloaders, although there are no reported on-duty UDs with revolvers. Off-duty is when they occur. I’ve written about this before. https://thetacticalprofessor.net/2020/08/19/dry-practice-safety/

No doubt someone will comment that the correct term is Negligent Discharge. The LAPD uses the terms Unintentional Discharge, Negligent Discharge, and Accidental Discharge in very specific context, so I will use their terminology here.

A common cause of Unintentional Discharges is Impromptu Dry Practice and faulty unloading procedures. Another is attempting to clean/maintain loaded weapons. Upon conclusion of the investigation, such incidents will be adjudicated by the Board of Police Commissioners as Negligent.

NON-TACTICAL UNINTENTIONAL DISCHARGE – 040-19     UD at home

NON-TACTICAL UNINTENTIONAL DISCHARGE – 076-08      UD at hotel

NON-TACTICAL UNINTENTIONAL DISCHARGE – 014-23      UD at Rampart Station

Example Proximate Cause of UD

Officer A placed his left hand under the open cylinder and used his left index finger to depress the ejector rod, releasing the live rounds into his left hand. Officer A did not count the live rounds and placed them on top of the kitchen counter directly behind him. Officer A then closed the cylinder and pressed the trigger twice.

According to Officer A, believing his revolver was still unloaded, he placed his finger on the trigger and pressed it a third time, which caused the revolver to discharge a single round. No one was injured by the discharge.

Since my previous post, an even better solution and accompanying procedure has become available. The solution is the SafeSnap™ Training Disc for 5-Shot J-frame Size Revolvers. https://zetasix.com/product/safesnap-5/

Fair disclaimer: I was involved in the development of the SafeSnap™ but I receive no compensation for commenting about it.

The procedure works as follows. Have a SafeSnap and a twist knob speedloader such as HKS, 5 Star, or Lyman of the correct size for your revolver. Keep both of them readily available.

Don’t zip tie them together, that was just for my presentation.

When you decide to dry practice or do maintenance on your revolver, get them before doing anything.

  1. Take the live cartridges out.
  2. Count and secure them in the twist knob Speedloader. If there are any empty holes left in the speedloader, the FBI calls that ‘a clue.’
  3. Put the SafeSnap™ Training Disc in the revolver.
  4. Do your dry practice or maintenance.
  5. When finished, don’t reload the gun.
  6. Do something else to occupy your mind and remove dry practice from your thoughts.
  7. When you do reload, say “This gun is loaded” out loud three times.

Using such a procedure will go a long way toward preventing Unintentional Discharges. Nevertheless, muzzle direction is still the Primary Safety; always has been, always will be.

The SafeSnap™ is also available for K frames and LCRs. There are other procedures appropriate for autoloaders but this post is specific to revolvers.

Other causes of Unintentional Discharges

  • Administratively carrying or handling loaded handguns without a holster
  • High stress tactical situations
  • Drunkenness

Final note: It’s also inappropriate to dry practice using your girlfriend’s cat as a target.

https://cowboystatedaily.com/2025/04/17/brief-gillette-man-didnt-know-gun-was-loaded-when-he-shot-pet-cat-dead/ Not only will it sour your relationship with her but could conceivably lead to Animal Cruelty charges, which are a Felony in most States.

If you are interested in more in-depth commentary about shooting and Personal Protection incident analysis, please consider subscribing to my Patreon page. https://www.patreon.com/TacticalProfessor

Practicing with a Snub Revolver

Favorite Five Shot Snub Revolver Courses of Fire

#wheelgunwednesday

Smith & Wesson Model 36 with flexible loading strip

While some consider the five shot snub revolver passé, it is still a common self-defense tool and viable when used correctly. Using a snub correctly does require a bit of familiarity and practice, so here are some practice regimens that are appropriate for snubs and can be used at most indoor ranges. CCW Qualification Courses have value in that they provide structure for practice and a modest measure of skill determination. Note that simply shooting a CCW Qualification Course on your own DOES NOT mean you are authorized to carry a handgun in that area. Check the local laws for carry requirements.

All Courses of Fire are untimed. Any silhouette target can be used. When using the B-27 target, only count hits inside the 8 ring. For those who feel confident of their marksmanship ability, put a sheet of paper on the silhouette and only count hits on it.

  • New York State CCW Qualification Course – 5 rounds
    • Silhouette at 4 yards.
    • With an unloaded revolver, draw, snap at the target, and safely reholster. Draw the unloaded revolver, load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready. Fire five rounds at the target.
    • Four of five rounds must hit the target to successfully qualify.
  • Nevada CCW Qualification (5 shot revolver version) – 25 rounds
    • Silhouette at 3 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready. Fire five rounds at the target.
    • Move Silhouette to 5 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready. Fire five rounds at the target, reload, and fire five more rounds at the target.
    • Move Silhouette to 7 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready. Fire five rounds at the target, reload, and fire five more rounds at the target.
    • Of the 25 rounds, 18 must hit the target to qualify.
  • LAPD Retired Officer Qualification Course – 10 rounds
    • Silhouette at 7 yards.
    • Load with five rounds and reholster. Draw, shoot five rounds, reload, and shoot five more. If the range does not permit drawing from a holster, start from Low Ready.
    • Seven of the 10 rounds must hit for a successful qualification.
  • San Diego (California) Sheriff CCW Qualification Course – 15 rounds
    • Silhouette at 7 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready. Fire five rounds at the target.
    • Move Silhouette to 5 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready. Fire five rounds at the target.
    • Move Silhouette to 3 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready, holding the revolver in the Primary Hand Only. Fire three rounds at the target. Transfer the revolver to the Support Hand Only and fire two more rounds at the target.
    • Of the 15 rounds, 13 must hit the target to qualify.
  • Kansas Concealed Carry License Qualification Test – 25 rounds
    • Silhouette at 3 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready, holding the revolver in the Primary Hand Only. Fire five rounds at the target.
    • Move Silhouette to 7 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready with both hands. Fire five rounds at the target, reload, and fire five more rounds at the target.
    • Move Silhouette to 10 yards.
    • Load with five rounds, and come to Low Ready with both hands. Fire five rounds at the target, reload, and fire five more rounds at the target.
    • Eighteen of the 25 rounds must hit the target to qualify.

Trigger manipulation practice is enhanced if after firing a shot, we open the cylinder, spin it, and then close it without looking at the round placement. Only fire one shot after closing the cylinder and then open and spin it again. As the rounds become fired, we will encounter fired cases as we press the trigger. By watching the sights carefully as we press the trigger, any jerking of the trigger will be obvious. These dummy snaps are where we learn to press the trigger smoothly.

Although reloading can be done with loose ammunition from a box of ammo, it’s more useful to have some kind of loading device. Using a loading device gives some practice at reloading the revolver under some conditions of stress. The snub shooting organization Snub Noir https://snubnoir.com/ uses three devices in their matches. They are looped ammunition carrier, flexible loading strip, and speed loader. Other possibilities are 2x2x2 ammo pouch and dump pouch for loose ammunition.

These Courses of Fire don’t have to be shot all at once. At the point of feeling fatigued or bruised from recoil, pack it up, and call it a day. Have fun with your practice and you’ll be more inclined to do it more often.