
A month ago, I visited the range with my former police agency to qualify for my LEOSA card, also known as H.B. 218, for off-duty carry. I mixed in at the firing line with officers I knew and some I didn’t. When I strapped on my gun belt, one of the guys with whom I had worked was taken aback. “What is that?” he asked, staring at my waist. “A revolver, of course,” I answered. “But why?” he inquired.
I went to the Police Academy in 1987. Back then, all 25 police agencies in my Florida county still shot wheelguns. My department was the very first to transition to the autoloader, so I was taught on both the revolver and automatic platforms. I was issued a Smith & Wesson Model 64 revolver and a Model 669 in auto, representing each respective weapons system. I was familiarized on both. The revolver was turned back into the armorer after the Academy.
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