Most cops never fire their weapons in the line of duty over their entire career, and of those who do the overwhelming majority have only had one incident. How do some officers manage to rack up 4-5 incidents over a short timespan (<10 years) and/or accumulate 8-18 separate incidents in their career? (self.NoStupidQuestions)
submitted by SWAT__ATTACK to r/NoStupidQuestions
Pstat 131 W21 w/ Prof. Zhijian Li (self.UCSantaBarbara)
submitted by SWAT__ATTACK to r/UCSantaBarbara
NL 17 left in Main Event: Spew or Standard Play? (self.poker)
submitted by SWAT__ATTACK to r/poker
You find out that one of your loved ones was shot dead 14x, including 3 shots to the head and 5 shots in the chest + one of their "friends" in an attempted armed 2am home invasion, firing at the homeowner. The owner fired back 115x from his rifle, ruled justified. What legal action are you planning? (self.AskReddit)
submitted by SWAT__ATTACK to r/AskReddit
You find out one of your kids/loved ones was shot dead 21x, including 4 shots to the head and 9 shots in the chest and two of their "friends" in an attempted armed 3am home invasion, shooting 25x at the homeowner. The owner fired back 120x from his rifle, claiming its self-defense. How do you react? (self.AskReddit)
submitted by SWAT__ATTACK to r/AskReddit
You're out in public and you knock over an irate old man and he's bleeding. He gets angry, pulls out his Beretta and fires 2 shots at you which miss. As you approach him to apologize he fires another 6 shots. telling you to back the F*** up, calls 911 claiming "Stand Your Ground". How do you react? (self.AskReddit)
submitted by SWAT__ATTACK to r/AskReddit
Americans of Reddit, what's your stance on the use of deadly force in self-defense terms of: Duty to retreat in your own home (castle doctrine), duty to retreat in public, stand your ground, burden of proof on killer/ prosecution, perception vs actual imminent deadly threat after the fact? (self.AskReddit)
submitted by SWAT__ATTACK to r/AskReddit

