By David RittgersABC’s
20/20 did a
hit
piece on the Second Amendment and armed citizens on Friday night. The show
responded to the growing sentiment that “if I only had a gun,” maybe an armed
citizen could make a difference in a spree shooting such as the incidents at
Virginia Tech and Northern Illinois University. In reality, it ought to be
called “if I had ONLY a gun.” Picking people without
concealed carry permits to
represent the armed citizen and rigging the scenario to ensure that they don’t
defeat your narrative is propaganda, not
journalism.
Several college students are selected to represent the “armed student”
hypothetical, given some marksmanship training, and armed with training
guns
that shoot paint bullets. The firearms instructor who trained them plays spree
shooter and storms the room. All of the students are hit before they can
effectively engage the mock spree shooter.
The show handicaps this scenario in favor of the attacker in several ways.
First, none of the students selected are
actual concealed handgun
permit holders who carry daily and practice regularly. Those with more
experience get it from shooting Airsoft guns or from a form of shooting that
does not involve drawing from concealment. The poor performance of the students
in hitting the attacker is supposedly explained by the lack of law enforcement
firearms training.
The simulation is too narrowly construed to show the full impact of an armed
response. First, the experiment is limited to one armed student in the first
classroom that the spree shooter hits. At Virginia Tech, the spree shooter
entered several rooms, so a student in any room other than the first would be
able to draw, find a position of cover and concealment, point the gun at the
door, and wait for the assailant to enter. Second, the experiment supposes that
an intended victim pulling a gun and shooting back, even if not immediately
effective, does nothing to stop the attack.
These results don’t reflect the reality of an armed citizen responding to a
spree shooter. Contrary to what the firearms instructor says, it is not “too
much for a normal person” to deal with. Often, the mere confrontation with an
armed response takes them out of their revenge fantasy and derails the killing
spree.
Some examples:
1997, Pearl, Mississippi: A 16-year old boy stabs his mother to death, then
goes to the local high school to continue his rampage with a rifle. An
assistant principal hears the gunshots, retrieves a pistol from his truck, and
confronts the assailant. The boy surrenders.
1998, Edinboro, Pennsylvania: A 14-year old boy opens fire at a high school
graduation dance being held at a local restaurant. The restaurant owner
confronts the boy with his shotgun, who
surrenders.
2002, Appalachian Law School: Two law students with law enforcement and
military backgrounds run to their cars, grab
handguns, and
stop an expelled law student on a
rampage.
2005, Tyler, Texas: A distraught man ambushes his estranged wife and son as
they are entering the courthouse for a child support hearing. After killing his
wife and wounding several deputies, armed citizen Mark Wilson
intervenes with his handgun and
shoots the spree shooter. The shooter is wearing a flak jacket and kills Wilson
with return fire. Wilson’s actions broke up the attack and gave law enforcement
officers time to organize a response that ended with the shooter’s death.
Wilson is later honored by the Texas legislature.
2005, Tacoma Mall: A spree shooter with a criminal record and five days’
worth of meth in his system opens fire at the Tacoma Mall. Concealed carry
permit holder Dan McKown intervenes, but gives a verbal warning instead of
shooting. McKown is
shot and receives a spinal injury that leaves him
paralyzed, but the shooter retreated into a store and took some hostages after
being confronted. After
complaining about life’s travails to
his hostages for several hours, he is taken into custody and
sentenced to 163 years in prison.
2007, New Life Church, Colorado: Volunteer security guard Jeanne Assam
shoots a spree shooter as he enters
the foyer of a
church. The spree shooter’s blaze of glory is over, so he shoots
and kills himself.
2008, Israel: A Palestinian man goes on a killing spree in the library of a
seminary. Police officers
stop at the door and do not go in
after him. Student Yitzhak Dadon draws his gun and
engages the shooter, wounding him. Part-time
student and Israeli Army officer David Shapira
blows past the cops, demanding a hat to identify
him as a police officer and not the assailant, before entering the building and
killing the spree shooter.
2009, Houston, Texas: Distraught woman enters her father’s workplace and
shoots one man with a bow and arrow. She points a pellet gun at two employees,
both concealed handgun permit holders, who
shoot her. Police show up and she
points the pellet gun at them. They shoot her again and take her into
custody.
The scenario is also unrealistic in that the student is seated dead center in
the front row, a bad move for someone trying to conceal a gun on their hip under
a T-shirt; far better in the back of the room in a corner. Plus, the spree
shooter is expecting resistance and knows where the armed student will be,
advantages that will not be replicated in the real world. In one iteration of
the scenario, a second assailant is placed a couple of seats away from the armed
student. When the armed student draws to shoot at the assailant, he is
blindsided by the co-conspirator. This isn’t a result of “tunnel vision,” as
the program would tell you. This is a rigging of the experiment. A second
assailant in placed practically next to the armed student, while our amateur is
wearing a face mask that restricts vision? No one, not even the firearms
instructor playing spree shooter, would win in that situation.
There are no magical powers that accrue to a sworn officer, contrary to the
anti-concealed carry propaganda this piece puts out. A recent NYPD Firearms
Discharge Report
shows that hit percentages for a major metropolitan
police department never rise above the 50% mark, even within two yards of the
assailant. Unsurprisingly, people who carry a gun and train with it
consistently outperform those who do not. The FBI’s report “
Violent Encounters:
A Study of Felonious Assaults on Our Nation’s Law Enforcement Officers”
shows that criminals who beat cops in
gunfights practiced regularly while their victims only averaged 14 hours of
firearms training a year.
The only thing that stops a spree shooter is a bullet, either from their gun
when they commit suicide or from someone else who intervenes to stop further
loss of life. Law enforcement responses that quarantine the shooter
compound the problem, while aggressive “active
shooter” protocols that push police officers into the scene in small teams or as
individuals tend to
reduce casualties. The police
response is moving toward being on the scene as fast as possible with a gun; we
ought to follow their reasoning and allow people to have a fighting chance, not
advise them to play dead and call the cops on their cell phone. When seconds
count, the police are only minutes away.
On the bright side, 60 minutes had a more balanced
segment on the recent surge in
firearm sales and
prospects for a revival of gun control in Congress.
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OPINION: Breaking Down 60 Minutes' Anti-Gun Bias
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20/20's bias shows though
Excellent analysis! Do Americans really trust these "news" shows anymore? As a military journalist, I'm appalled by what passes for journalism nowadays! Thankfully, we have places like the CATO Institute to help straighten out the record, but I'm afraid it will be too little too late for many who lack the initiative to find the truth.
-SSGT/USMC
- defensiveEdge
April 14, 2009 4:40AM
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20/20-Biased, and unscientific = misleading
I'm afraid that too many people do indeed trust these "news" shows. I watched that show in horror, both offended in what they were trying to portray, and knowing in the back of my head that many people who watched would be convinced of the "message".
Two other comments on the shooter's (instructor) advantage I would point out that was unrealisticly shown: Because he was LE, his marksmanship would be better than the average wacko who decides to go on a rampage; and second, the instructor knows going in that someone in the room is armed....how hard is it to look for the person drawing a weapon when you know ahead of time what you are getting into? That is as far from being scientific as possible.
Other issues I saw....these folks were handed brand new thumbreak holsters...stiff and slow. Talk about stacking the deck.
- Jonesy
April 14, 2009 11:43AM
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We have become a society of wimps
The Perps and criminals have the weapons and are not afraid to use them. They expect the public to bow down to them. In most cases that is what happens. This week in Atlanta an armed perp went into a store with a gun and planned to rob it. While in that act a customer named "Caveman" attacked the perp with a step ladder. Result no more robbery. Yes it could have gone the other way. But many of these people are desperate. I believe in the concept of an armed society . Because an armed society is a polite society. Many in our society also don't value life. Have I ever held a gun on someone? The answer is yes. Would I do it again? The answer is I hope not, but I would if I had to. It is not something to boast about and I don't. I prayed every moment the fellow would turn away from my back door. Thank God he finally did. I hear people say I would shoot him down like a mad dog. Believe me the butt end of a shotgun can make you think. In my case this action resulted from getting involved and taking a stand. I believe if these people were stopped much quicker and the sentences were harsher we would see a different result.
In Atlanta the Courthouse Shooter Brian Nichols had a pack of Lawyers paid for by the people. This sort of thing is out of control and only fuels the energies of unbalanced people.
I guess since Caveman attacked with a step ladder we need to outlaw step ladders!
- JWINGEORGIA
April 15, 2009 11:49AM
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Example of bad experiment
The six students sat in the classroom with their concealed guns . When the attacker entered the room, everyone (the accomplices) started running around chaotically or towards the exit. Rather than shooting at them, the attacker almost immediately walks towards the student (who hadn't even had his weapon out yet) and begins blasting him! How would an attacker know who has a concealed weapon and who doesn't?
- ufcarazy
April 15, 2009 1:17PM
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Minnesota
What a crock. Another attempt to deceive the public with an anti gun slant. Problem is those that don't carry or own a gun may take 20/20 as a reputable source and not research the validity of such a rigged portrayal of a supposed real life situation.
Do people actually believe the death toll at Virginia Tech would have been no different had an armed student or faculty member been within gun range of Mr. Sho? I'm afraid some would be led to think that by this kind of reporting.
Do people actually think that the terrorists in Mumbai, India would have had free killing
rein had India had a 2nd amendment right? That is what the media would lead the unsuspecting public to believe.
Please join the NRA before Holder and Obama convince the uninformed public that my 870 Wingmaster is an assault rifle. You can bet they will leave out the part that it is a shotgun.
- Minnesotan
April 15, 2009 1:22PM
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You forgot the Gun Show peice
Excelent protrayl of the one sided show that ABC broadcast. Read todays story about a Gun Owner in Virginia that protected his Family from an intruder because "he did have a gun".
The are alot of those stories that you won't see on the main stream media . What about the Gun show portion of the 2020 program! To the uninformed it looks Gun Shows sell all firearms without any paper work, ID checks, or approval from the Government. From what I see at Gun Shows more than 98% are gun shops that have tables at the show. A few private sales are not a true representation of what really goes on!
- Badco6354
April 15, 2009 4:10PM
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must reading
this article is to the point and honest. Thanks.
- the car man msncom
April 15, 2009 9:24PM
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Biased Documentary.
20/20 totally mislead their viewers by showing a father and son at a shooting range firing an AK47 and a Uzi on full automatic. Full automatic weapons (assualt weapons) have been outlawed since 1934 in the U.S. 20/20 made it look like they are commonly owned. It takes a very intense background check and about $5000 to get a permit to own a full automatic weapon. That $5000 is a price I won't pay and I also have no interest in owning one!
- MudEngineeer
April 15, 2009 10:21PM
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Truth is Obvious
I DVR'd this and my wife and I got a good laugh at the nonsense. We both saw the inaccuracy right away. One Gun vs. One gun, and the criminal new who had the gun. This is not likely. If the armed students location and face were not known then perhaps it would be more fair. Criminals don't know who have guns . However, if a criminal knows there are several armed people in the room they wont barge that room. This is why you don't see criminals trying to take on police stations, or prisons, or us rednecks out in the woods. They know we have guns and have no problem putting a bullet in a life threatening criminal.
- rekiser
April 16, 2009 7:49AM
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"A hit piece"
It was a piece. Of bologna. As already shown the experiments were flawed and the gun owners/gun shows were portrayed as free flowing arms dealing reminiscent of Nicolas Cage's character in "Lord of War".
I primarily wanted to comment on the lack of opposing views being listed. It seems the verdict is unanimous.
- ecuadmail
April 19, 2009 8:49PM
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