The November 28th police shooting in Austin, Texas, where a mounted patrol officer neutralized an active shooter at over 100 yards with his handgun, reminded me of another active shooter incident 20 years ago. Both cases reinforce the lesson that police pistol training needs to take place at longer ranges.
Austin Sgt. Adam Johnson engaged suspect Larry McQuilliams, who had unleashed over 200 rounds around the city’s downtown from two rifles, at 312 feet with his duty Smith & Wesson M&P40. Johnson was on foot and holding the reigns of two horses when he fired a single fatal shot, one-handed, at the suspect. The bullet hit the McQuilliams in the heart and stopped him.
Decades earlier on June 20, 1994, U.S. Air Force Security Policeman Andrew Brown was on bicycle patrol at Fairchild AFB in Spokane, Washington. Dean Mellberg was an airman who had been discharged for mental issues. Mellberg, armed with a rifle, began a shooting rampage at Continue reading