I was just reading an interesting article from POLICE magazine, the average 70 yard to target myth has been put to death, the study is very interesting, here is an excerpt:
Distance to Target
The ASA study, which is titled “Police Sniper Utilization Report 2005,” revealed that contrary to the old 70-yard myth, the average range at which police snipers engage suspects is actually 51 yards.
While at first the 19-yard discrepancy doesn’t seem significant, it should be noted that this is almost a 30-percent difference.
Does this mean that police sniper training should be modified to match this new reality? Perhaps. One thing that the survey clearly reveals is that police snipers often engage at much closer distances than SWAT trainers believe.
For example, the ASA report documents one sniper engagement at a distance of five yards. At first glance, this may seem like an “easy” task for a sniper trained to shoot at targets at much greater range. However, while distance to the target was not a great concern with this shot, the conditions presented many challenges for the sniper.
The ASA report says, “This shot was taken indoors in a hostage situation. The sniper was forced to use a teammate as a standing support to make a shot on a very elusive and fleeing target.” If that wasn’t difficult enough, the shot had to be taken very quickly in low light.
There is much dispute as to the longest range at which a police sniper has engaged a suspect. The ASA study documents a hostage incident in which a sniper from the Pennsylvania State Police fired on a suspect from 187 yards.
There is also anecdotal evidence of police snipers shooting at suspects from as much as 400 yards. However, most of these cannot be confirmed or they are so exceptional in nature that they can only loosely be defined as SWAT sniper engagements
Thankfully the SWAT snipers almost never have to shoot-that is a good thing. Of the 200,000 times SWAT was called out, across the US, only 172 suspects were shot and killed by SWAT. When you stop and think about it, out of 200,000 times-the sight of a SWAT team alone must have caused 99%+ of the bad guys just to give up! I hope we get more swat teams.
Distance to Target
The ASA study, which is titled “Police Sniper Utilization Report 2005,” revealed that contrary to the old 70-yard myth, the average range at which police snipers engage suspects is actually 51 yards.
While at first the 19-yard discrepancy doesn’t seem significant, it should be noted that this is almost a 30-percent difference.
Does this mean that police sniper training should be modified to match this new reality? Perhaps. One thing that the survey clearly reveals is that police snipers often engage at much closer distances than SWAT trainers believe.
For example, the ASA report documents one sniper engagement at a distance of five yards. At first glance, this may seem like an “easy” task for a sniper trained to shoot at targets at much greater range. However, while distance to the target was not a great concern with this shot, the conditions presented many challenges for the sniper.
The ASA report says, “This shot was taken indoors in a hostage situation. The sniper was forced to use a teammate as a standing support to make a shot on a very elusive and fleeing target.” If that wasn’t difficult enough, the shot had to be taken very quickly in low light.
There is much dispute as to the longest range at which a police sniper has engaged a suspect. The ASA study documents a hostage incident in which a sniper from the Pennsylvania State Police fired on a suspect from 187 yards.
There is also anecdotal evidence of police snipers shooting at suspects from as much as 400 yards. However, most of these cannot be confirmed or they are so exceptional in nature that they can only loosely be defined as SWAT sniper engagements
Thankfully the SWAT snipers almost never have to shoot-that is a good thing. Of the 200,000 times SWAT was called out, across the US, only 172 suspects were shot and killed by SWAT. When you stop and think about it, out of 200,000 times-the sight of a SWAT team alone must have caused 99%+ of the bad guys just to give up! I hope we get more swat teams.
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