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  • Call for greater police firepower grows

    Indianapolis Star, IN
    Aug 21 2004

    Call for greater police firepower grows
    Training, public safety are top concerns as officials consider ways
    to upgrade weaponry.


    By Richard D. Walton
    [email protected]
    August 21, 2004


    To Linda Jackson, news of a fellow Indianapolis police officer killed
    with a military-style rifle stirred painful memories of the day she
    was wounded with a similar weapon two years ago.

    And with the memories came frustration.

    Jackson wants to know how many dead police it will take before IPD
    arms its officers with the same kind of firepower that Kenneth C.
    Anderson used to kill Patrolman Timothy "Jake" Laird early Wednesday.
    Anderson also wounded four other officers before being killed by a
    SWAT team member who, unlike regular patrol officers, has access to
    high-powered weapons.

    Jackson, a bullet fragment still lodged in her body from her
    encounter with a mentally ill man using a rapid-fire rifle, said IPD
    no longer can delay handing out to officers more than 200
    high-powered AR-15 rifles the department acquired about a year ago.
    Those weapons still are in boxes, awaiting the department's decision
    on where to train police in their use.

    "There's no looking into it," Jackson said. "This just needs to
    happen."

    But protecting officers can't mean endangering the public, police
    officials say. And stray shots from the powerful weapons could do
    just that in crowded neighborhoods or if training is conducted in an
    unsuitable place.

    About two years ago, workers were doing repairs on a Westside gas
    station just south of the IPD firing range when they found bullet
    fragments on the roof.

    If rounds from the handguns fired could escape the range, ones from
    the high-powered AR-15s certainly would, too, said IPD Sgt. Steve
    Staletovich. In considering a training site, he said, "we were afraid
    that the bullets would eventually go right through the berm."

    The firepower Anderson had in his Southside rampage was put on
    display Friday by IPD. It included an Armenian-built SKS-style rifle.
    The brown-stocked weapon is capable of firing up to 1,000 yards. A
    round travels at a speed of 2,800 to 3,200 feet per second, almost
    three times the velocity of a hollow-point bullet fired from the
    standard handgun carried by IPD street officers, the .40-caliber
    Glock pistol.

    A shot fired from the SKS-style rifle could penetrate a car door or a
    board two to three times as thick as a 2-by-4, said David J.
    Brundage, a firearms examiner with the Indianapolis-Marion County
    Forensic Services Agency.

    Vince Huber, president of the local Fraternal Order of Police, has
    criticized IPD for not issuing patrol officers heavier weapons after
    the September 2001 shooting death of Marion County Sheriff's Deputy
    Jason Baker, killed with the same type of rifle Anderson used.

    "It's not been an isolated incident," Huber said after Laird's death.
    "We've seen a pattern of criminals having a better weapon."

    Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi also believes IPD officers need
    more firepower, although he's careful not to suggest it would have
    made any difference in this week's shooting spree.

    "I don't know and no one knows whether . . . any life could have been
    saved." But Brizzi said more weaponry might save someone next time.
    "Because there will be a next time," he said.

    In some communities, however, the call has been for less firepower,
    not more.

    In Cincinnati, for example, officers carry just a handgun, a
    semi-automatic 9 mm Smith & Wesson pistol. Each squad car has a
    12-gauge shotgun. But only SWAT team members have the powerful
    rifles.

    Unlike the emotion-charged demands for more heavy weaponry being made
    here, in the Ohio city there have been concerns that police had too
    much firepower. Some citizens complained when, in the past, officers
    carried .357 Magnums, said Lt. Kurt Byrd of the Cincinnati Police
    Department.

    Police agencies across Indiana and the nation reassessed their
    firepower after a bank robbery and shootout in 1997 in California.
    Los Angeles police, armed with pistols and shotguns, traded gunfire
    with two men clad in body armor and firing automatic weapons.
    Overmatched police ran into a nearby gun store for rifles. Now Los
    Angeles police have more powerful rifles.

    That incident "opened a lot of eyes" about the mismatch with the
    criminals, said Maj. Randy Werden, chief of the enforcement division
    of the Johnson County Sheriff's Department. So much so that the
    department, which had been issuing shotguns to its street officers,
    began equipping them with Ruger rifles.

    Each officer is issued at least 25 rounds with the rapid-fire weapon.
    Basically "as fast as you can pull the trigger, it will discharge a
    round," Werden said.

    A possible training site for IPD officers would be Camp Atterbury in
    Johnson County, but Staletovich said the cost of getting more than
    200 officers to that site must be considered.

    But IPD could get a cost break from the Indiana Law Enforcement
    Academy. Not only would the range on the 300-acre site in Plainfield
    safely accommodate training with high-powered weapons, Indianapolis
    police also could take training as in-kind compensation for training
    IPD has provided the academy, said Scott Mellinger, the academy's
    executive director.

    Officer Jackson, who survived her confrontation with a high-powered
    rifle, says it's only right that the department get the extra guns
    out on the street.

    Do it in memory of Officer Laird, she said. "It's the very least they
    can do."
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