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CCW Profiling? Maybe! But think about how you act.

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Here is an interesting excerpt from the Milwaukee JournalSentinel online edition of July 24…

Milwaukee police officer Cassandra Benitez testified that when she first looked into Sutterfield’s car from the passenger side with a flashlight, she did not notice the 9mm Glock on Sutterfield’s hip, despite being extra alert to a possible weapon after seeing a National Rifle Association cap on the back seat.

Benitez testified that her training told her that the presence of NRA gear makes it more likely the person might have a gun.

Open carry is a right, but every right comes with responsibilities

Yes this is taken out of context… the back story is that MPD officers rolled up on a car sitting in front of a business late at night. The driver of the car was there to use the free Wi-Fi offered by the business. She had a laptop open and operational. She had a gun on her hip (carried openly in accordance with Wisconsin Law). She also has a history in the area, after winning a settlement from the Milwaukee suburb of Brookfield for false arrest when she openly carried a gun into a church there. No charges were filed and the City of Brookfield paid her $7500 for troubling her so.

So, at about 12:30 a.m. on Nov. 11, 2011, Milwaukee police spot a car parked in the parking lot of a coffee shop using the Wi-Fi. (Oh how I wish I could say it was a pro-gun Starbucks, but I don’t know for sure.) Officer Benitez and another officer approached the driver of the car  who was sitting there, computer open, looking at the internet, because they said the scene looked suspicious.  I’m a cop. I know about Terry Stops. This likely qualifies. I mean, it’s 12:30 a.m., the business is closed, an occupied vehicle sitting in the parking lot deserves a look. And, for me, a “look” includes getting identification from the driver to see if there are any active warrants, probation or parole (for burglary maybe?) or anything else. Now here is where things get odd and confusing and a little common sense BY BOTH PARTIES makes them better.

The cops say they want to see some ID, the driver of the car refuses. Now, in some cases, it is your right to refuse to talk to the police. If you are walking down a sidewalk minding your own business, even late at night, and cop says, “Hey, can I talk to you?” You can say, “No.” and just keep on walking. That’s because you have a right to be there and walking on a sidewalk is what people normally do on sidewalks. But if something is out of the ordinary, then things change. Is this a high-crime area? Are you in the area when it is typically not occupied? Are you doing something people don’t ordinarily do at that place and time? There is some latitude here. Police officers can make a Terry stop if they have reasonable suspicion to believe that a crime “has been committed, is being committed or is about to be committed.” That is broad latitude, but it is the law. So the questioning is OK. It is also OK to ask for a driver’s license as proof of ID because, a reasonable person would expect that that someone sitting in the driver’s seat of a car in a parking lot drove it there. So, to insure that the driver is legally licensed to drive, it is reasonable to gather that information.  It is perfectly legal to run the plate because that is out in plain sight. So, from the plate you get the name of the registered owner. This reinforces the idea a police officer can reasonably ask the person behind the wheel for ID to check out if that person is legally driving the car. It could have been stolen but not yet reported.

Instead of saying, “Yes, officer, here is my driver’s license, I believe I am here legally and I have a legal firearm with me.” The driver refused to identify herself and locked the doors to her car. If you really want to arouse suspicion from a couple cops do that. Now you have gone from “routine contact” to “things are getting odd.” The citizen only opened her doors when a supervisor arrived and threatened to break the windows of the car to extract her. Tensions are rising and the only thing the cops really know for sure is there is a gun in the car.

It is a mixed up situation. The officers said her weapon was concealed. The citizen said it was not. The jury believed the citizen. But it all could have been avoided with some common courtesy, something all to often lacking today.

I am upset that MPD officers are trained to be on high alert because they see an NRA emblem. But I will always err on the side of officer safety. Certainly I will be more concerned if I see an MS-13 tattoo or an Insane Clown Posse emblem, but I will make note of an NRA emblem on a traffic stop. If I see a gun, or if the citizen tells me he or she has a gun, I have what I think is a very good opening line. “You don’t reach for yours and I won’t reach for mine. Put your hands where I can see them and don’t move them unless I tell you to.”

As concealed carry advocates everyone reading this blog agrees that we carry guns because never know when someone will decide to turn criminal. You can’t tell by looking and words are often not truthful concerning criminal intent. So put yourself in the place of these officers, thinking as you and I think as CCW holders: We never know when a crime will happen. Criminals come in all shapes and sizes and we know for sure there is a gun present at the scene and it is not under our direct control. If a gun is present, I am vigilant, aware, yes, even nervous. I want to take steps to keep the situation safe. That means knowing who I am dealing with, where the gun is and where the person’s hand are at all times.

In the end, the citizen won the court case. But did she win the larger battle? She still got arrested that night. She could have avoided that. She insured that even more police officers will look at Open Carry advocates as over-zealous clowns simply trying to prove a point. Think about how you as a gun owner interact with police. Sure, you know you are a safe, law-abiding, normal citizen, but the cops don’t. And you should not be offended by that because you understand and believe that no one can predict when someone will turn criminal. If you believe that, why shouldn’t cops?  Most of the people I’ve arrested looked normal, right up to the time they did something stupid.

The one thing I am glad to see with this case is that it ended in the courts, not on the streets.  If you have a dispute with a police officer on the street. If you honestly believe you are doing nothing wrong, the place to prove that is in the courts, not on the street.  Don’t argue and scream and fight with cops on the street, do it in court.  If the cop is wrong, the cop should be punished. In this case, the officers were wrong and I hope they get some additional training about what constitutes legal open carry. But I also hope the citizen learned that a little diplomacy could have kept the situation from getting out of control.

This is a complicated case. As a cop, if an armed subject starts refusing to cooperate the pucker factor increases greatly. As a citizen, I find it disturbing that an NRA emblem is now grounds for high alert. A little common courtesy could change that.

 

 


Other great books for those who carry concealed handguns:

The Gun Digest Book of Concealed Carry

The Gun Digest Book of Combat Handgunnery

Effective Handgun Defense, A Comprehensive Guide to Concealed Carry

 

Find more resources atgundigeststore.com/tactical

 

The 8 Rules of Wilderness Survival

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by Pat McHugh

Wilderness Survival TipsWilderness survival isn’t predictable enough for there to be “Do XYZ and you’ll live”-type rules. But there are hard, fast rules for outdoor survival that should prevent you from winding up worse off.

1. Send Your Itinerary to Someone Else

Always leave a detailed itinerary of where you are going and when you plan to return with someone you trust. If you change your schedule for any reason, please be sure that tell someone of that change.

2. Unless You’re With Someone Else, Don’t Go

Never go into a wilderness area by yourself. Unavoidable accidents can and do happen.

3. Remember that Weather Can Change

Make sure that you take with you and wear the proper clothing. Remember the weather can and will most likely change.

4. Vacate your location? Never

If you do get lost or stranded, stay in one location. Rescuers will find you if you have followed rule No. 1.

5. Information is a Good Thing

Learn how to use a compass or a GPS, take a map of the area and orient yourself to the area before you trek off into any wilderness.

6. Very Important: Survival Kit

Always carry a personal survival kit with you at all times in the outdoors.  A survival kit in the hands of someone who does not know ahead of time what is in it, or if it is not with you on your person, or how to use the contents when and where needed can do more harm than good.  So take the preparation time at home to make and pack your own personal kit.  Also invest the time beforehand to understand the life saving use of every item in your personal survival kit.

7. Always Keep Your Cool

The greatest and most important of all survival tools is your brain.  If you should become lost, stranded or separated from others, keep your cool. The most important wilderness survival element is to not panic. You will survive.

8. Let Yourself Have Time to Plan

The time to think about survival isn’t in a tight spot. Give yourself plenty of time to plan, prepare and pack for the worst. You’re reading this article right now, and that’s a good start.

Put these rules together and what do they spell? S-U-R-V-I-V-A-L


More Wilderness Survival Tips

Outdoors survival bookThese outdoors survival rules give a bird’s eye view of survival. If you’re ready to dig deep, check out Stay Alive! Survival Skills You Need by John D. McCann. Using full-color photos and thorough instructions for the  best shot at wilderness survival.

Click here to order Stay Alive! Survival Skills You Need for 40% off retail.

Video: Review of CUMA Tak-Ri 2.0 Survival Knife

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Survival knives come in many shapes and sizes these days. But history has selected a handful of designs that stand the test of time. One of them is the khukri (koo-kree), a knife that got its start in Nepal. Its familiar curve almost resembles a metal boomerang, and it’ll want to push out of your hand just like one. The curve moves the weight forward and down. As generations of workers, soldiers and regular folks can attest, the khukri is perfect for chopping and slashing.

Fast forward to today. The TOPS CUMA Tak-Ri 2.0, designed by Waysun Johnny Tsai, updates the khukri as a modern tactical and survival knife. This video reviews why it’s a good choice for your collection of survival knives.


Survival neck knife

Gun Digest Recommends

It’s never a good idea to carry only one survival knife. But it’s also not a good idea to carry too much gear. The CRKT Crawford N.E.C.K. is the perfect solution. Wear it on a lanyard around the neck while taking care of business with the TOPS CUMA Tak-Ri.

Click here to get a CRKT Crawford N.E.C.K. Knife for 27% off retail from ShopBlade.com.

Firearms Writer Jerry Ahern Dies July 24, 2012

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Firearms writer Jerry Ahern
Photo via JerryAhern.com

Sources have informed Gun Digest that long-time firearms writer Jerry Ahern died July 24, 2012, at age 66. He contributed many articles to Gun Digest, as well as firearms books and even a survival guide. His fiction work included a series of novels called, The Survivalist. He was also an analyst of current events. Ahern’s final blog post on his personal website addressed the Arab Spring. Read his full obituary, including memorial services, here.

A selection of his work includes:

Gun Digest Guide to Concealed Carry HandgunsArmed for Personal Defense by Jerry AhernSurvive: The Disaster, Crisis and Emergency Handbook by Jerry Ahern

Gun Digest sends its best wishes to the Ahern family.

Marines Special Operations to Use Colt .45 Close Quarter Battle Pistols

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Marine Special Operations will use Colt .45 Close Quarter Battle Pistols
A Marine loads a pistol. (Image via Military.com)

Colt Defense LLC will manufacture more than 10,000 new .45 Close Quarter Battle Pistols for the Marine Corps’ elite special operations. This new contract for the 1911-style pistols will phase out the M45s currently used by the Corps.

As reported by Military.com, “The July 19 [2012] contract, which has a total value of $22.5 million, brings an end to the Corps’ exhaustive search for the top .45 caliber, 1911-style pistol to replace the fleet of worn-out Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command, or MARSOC, M45 pistols.”

“We picked the best-performing pistol,” said Charles Clark III in the article. Clark oversees infantry weapons requirements at the Corps’ Combat Development and Integration office in Quantico, Va. “There were three candidates that made the final round of consideration.”

Clark did not discuss the competitors.

In addition to Colt, Springfield Armory’s Full Size MC Operator and Smith & Wesson’s 1911 design were also considered, according to Military.com.

The new Close Quarter Battle Pistols will be very similar to the M45s they are replacing this fall. They will have a rail for mounting lights, a custom trigger, a manual safety, improved ergonomics and glowing Tritium sights for low-light conditions.”


Colt Firearms Pricing and HistoryLearn More About Colt Firearms

For a big dose of Colt firearms history, prices technical information, click here to check out this selection of Colt firearms resources at GunDigestStore.com.

Headspace 101: What Happens Inside Your Rifle’s Chamber

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Headspace gauges
Headspace gauges for the belted .375/338 are sized for bolt-to-belt measure. Wear of the chambering reamer (right) can diminish the size of chambers over time, affecting headspace.

Headspace is one of the most critical measures in your rifle. A quick definition: the distance from the face of the locked bolt to a datum line or shoulder in the chamber that arrests the forward movement of the cartridge. The term originated when all cartridges had protruding rims, so the measure was initially taken only at the head. Now it includes other spans.

Headspace - rimmed rounds
The Reising submachine gun uses the .45 ACP cartridge, which headspaces on the mouth.

Headspace is measured from the bolt-face to the mouth of a straight rimless hull like the .45 ACP, whose mouth stops against a small, abrupt shoulder at the front of the chamber. In a belted magnum, the stop is the leading edge of the belt, in the back of the chamber. On a .30-30 case it’s the front of the rim. The datum line for rimless or rebated bottleneck rounds like the .270 and .284 lies on the shoulder. Semi-rimmed cartridges theoretically headspace on the rim, but sometimes (as with the .38 Super Automatic) the rim protrusion is insufficient for sure function. The case mouth then serves as a secondary stop. The semi-rimmed .220 Swift has a more substantial lip; but most handloaders prefer to neck-size the Swift, so after a first firing, the case actually headspaces on its shoulder.

If there’s too little headspace, the bolt won’t close on a chambered round. Too much headspace can shorten case life, even cause case ruptures and dangerous gas escape.

When you pull the trigger, many events follow. The blow to the primer crushes shock-sensitive priming mix, which detonates. The explosion shoots flame through the flash-hole in the primer pocket, igniting the gunpowder. The resulting gas expands rapidly, stretching the ductile brass case. The thin case wall up front is ironed against the chamber wall, but the solid rear section around the primer pocket stays close to its original diameter, slightly smaller than the chamber. Gas pressure shoves it back against the bolt face. Still expanding, the gas thrusts the bullet out of the case.

Because cartridges vary slightly in dimensions, and each must chamber easily, the chamber must be a tad bigger than the average case. If there’s too much distance between the bolt face and the point in the chamber that stops the forward motion of a cartridge, however, you have excess headspace.

.45 ACP cartridges
Big-bore rounds are belted (.375, left), rimless (.416 Rigby) or rimmed (.470 and .500 NE, right). The belted and rimless were meant for magazine rifles. Rimmed rounds work best in hinged-breech doubles.

Until the thick case head moves rearward to meet the bolt face, the bolt face isn’t supporting it. The striker has pushed the case to its forward stop. Excess headspace causes excessive stretching. After repeated firings, the “work hardened” case becomes brittle as well as thinner just ahead of the web. It no longer stretches easily and can crack at the web, or even separate.

A cracked case is dangerous because it spills powder gas into the chamber. That gas jets through the tiniest corridors at velocities that can exceed bullet speed.  It may scoot along the bolt race, through the striker hole, into the magazine well. It can find your eye faster than you can blink.

Gunsmiths measure headspace with “go” and “no go” gauges.  The “go” gauge is typically .004 to .006 shorter than the “no go” gauge for rimless and belted cartridges. The bolt should close on a “go” gauge but not on a “no go” gauge. Theoretically, if the bolt closes on a “no go” gauge, the barrel should be set back a thread and rechambered to achieve proper headspace. However, many chambers that accept “no go” gauges are still safe to shoot. The “field” gauge, seldom seen now, has been used to check these (mostly military) chambers. It’s roughly .002 longer than a “no go” gauge.

Ammunition data
Explore more cartridge and ballistics data in the new Cartridges of the World, 13th Edition. Click the cover.

Minimum and maximum headspace measurements are not the same as corresponding minimum and maximum case dimensions. For example, a .30-06 chamber should measure between 1.940 and 1.946, bolt face to shoulder datum line. A .30-06 cartridge usually falls between 1.934 and 1.940. Case gauges perform the same check on cartridges that headspace gauges do in chambers.

An obvious difference: case gauges are female and don’t indicate headspace. They simply show whether a cartridge will chamber in a rifle that’s correctly barreled. Headspace is a steel-to-steel measure. Altering case dimensions changes the relationship of the cartridge to the chamber. Reducing head-to-datum line length of the round can result in a condition of excess headspace, even if the firearm checks out perfectly.

Click here to discuss rifles on GunForums.com.

Secure Your CCW With A Solid Belt

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Blackhawk pistol beltA cheap belt will not serve you well as you carry a concealed firearm. It will twist and droop.

The Blackhawk Pistol Belt uses an internal stiffener to insure your pistol stays tight and close to your body. These carbon-fiber and lizard skin finished belts give you the same appearance as any other 1 1/4 inch dress belt that is made of premium materials, with the added benefit of a reinforced spine to keep your gun where it belongs.

Don’t let your CCW down with a bad gun belt. If you wear a pistol, get one of these belts.

Click here to order one of these concealed carry belts from GunDigestStore.com at a great price.

Video: Pencil Sharpeners for Fire Starting

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Survival tipsJohn D. McCann, author of Stay Alive! Survival Skills You Need, demonstrates how to start a fire using pencil sharpeners. These tools are perfect for making tinder with wet sticks.

For more practical survival tips, order McCann’s book for 33% off retail.

Photos: The Many Uses of Paracord Netting

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Of the many paracord uses, netting is perhaps the most versatile. It can be used for any number of purposes, from transporting items to fishing to shelter. Here’s how to make paracord netting.

Where Disaster Strikes: Desert Survival Situations

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Desert survival starts with being prepared
The outcome of a desert survival situation depends on preparedness. But even that can only go so far in extreme conditions.

There’s a tendency to think disasters happen on large scales, but that’s not true. The geographic scope of an event doesn’t matter when you consider it’s individuals who experience them. To that individual, a local disaster may as well be the whole world.

Which is why it’s important to remember desert survival situations, such as that of William Martin LaFever. This 28-year-old man from Colorado Springs spent three weeks lost in a Utah desert. He survived off scavenged food and river water, according to FOXNews.com.

LaFever has autism, which may have contributed to him losing his way during a hiking trip to the scenic Escalante Desert.

This small-scale disaster resulted in a serious survival situation. Yet in an ironic twist, it may have been LaFever’s autism that also saved him this July.

From the article:

Gardner’s training in searching for people with autism taught him they are naturally drawn to water, so the helicopter search focused on the Escalante River, the department said.

The helicopter team spotted LaFever Thursday afternoon, sitting in the Escalante River about five miles from Lake Powell, barely being able to wave his arms.

Desert survival tipsHowever, that’s not a coincidence anyone should rely upon. Gun Digest recommends picking up a copy of Stay Alive! Survival Skills You Need for tips on desert survival.

Click here to discuss outdoors survival tips on KnifeForums.com.

 

 

 

Ball Ammo: The Best Survival Gun Bullets

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A lot of careful consideration and planning needs to be done in order to make sure you are ready for surviving a long-term calamity.  One area of attention is the type of combat ammunition you will purchase for stockpiling.

Ball ammo is best for survival guns. Choose brass cases.
Brass cases are better for operation and long-term storage. Avoid steel case cartridges.

Recent technological advances in ammunition of all types and calibers have been astounding, particularly in the area of defensive loads for pistols and rifles—most of which have been tested against the FBI’s ballistic gelatin/barrier protocols.

The only problem with premium defensive ammo is a hefty price tag compared to ball or plain lead ammo.  I don’t know about the rest of you, but I can’t afford to stockpile copious amounts of premium defensive and tactical ammo. The good news is that I don’t need to. Ball ammo will be fine for what may come. All of the wars in the last century and the present have been fought with ball ammo almost exclusively, and the millions of military and civilian dead on all sides prove its effectiveness.

Ball ammo actually possesses several advantages over the best premium loads in addition to cost savings:

1.  Ball is easy to acquire in bulk. Depending on the special, they are often sold in quality military type ammo cans making it easier to transport, or sealed in the “sardine can” format which makes it easier to store long term.

2.  Ball does have greater penetration than premium defensive and exotic loads.  In for civilian self-defense or LE applications, the use of premium defensive loads is a must under most circumstances.  We want and need penetration to be limited.  In a calamity situation, your ammo may very well need to perforate vehicles or other hard obstacles you encounter while moving to a safer area (a .30-06 ball in a M1 Garand works great for that), or when vehicles have invaded your property and are in formation against you. If there is a mob of people coming to harm my family, I want my shots to count for more than one per customer if you get my drift.

3.  Quality ball ammo is ultimately the most reliably functioning ammo.  It is what every modern semi-automatic weapons system, rifle or handgun designed for defense or combat was designed to run on.  Premium defensive ammo was developed long after the design any of the current weapons or their operating systems.   If you are pondering the purchase of an AR-15, get it with a 1-in-9 inch barrel twist rate.  It handles both 55 and 62-grain ball very well.

Well-placed rounds of ball will work especially well in handguns and rifles when launched in multiples of one. When purchasing ball rifle and handgun ammo, be wary of using steel case ammo in anything but an AK-47.  Don’t use corrosive primer ammo in anything. The 5.56mm steel case ammo mostly functions, but the AR was designed to run on brass, not steel case ammo, and prolonged use can result in unnecessary extractor wear.  Also, some of the Russian steel case 5.56 ammo produces more visible smoke and carbon fouling than higher quality brass case U.S. made ammo. The last thing that an AR needs is an extra charge of carbon blown back into the bolt carrier with each shot.  Of course, steel case ammo also rusts. Hornady and other makers “wash” their cases with zinc to help delay rust, but after boxes are opened, the zinc case develops a nasty white powder coating on it, even in controlled storage.

Some of the Russian brands use polymer or lacquer coatings on their cases to prevent rust and some of those will begin to gunk up a hot action during prolonged rapid firing.  Effects on the looser tolerance AK-47 will be of lesser concern. Your survival guns may need to last a long time without attention from a gunsmith, so be attentive to what type of ammo you feed it.

One last cautionary word.  Stay away from “Zombie Killer” type ammunition for your defensive needs.  If you need to make a defensive use of a firearm under current conditions, and you keep it loaded with ammo labeled as such, you will be made to look like an idiot in front of a court or grand jury, or worse yet, made to look like a deranged psychopath whose ability to distinguish between fantasy and reality is in question.  Such ammo is for fun use. If you want to play or compete with it, fine.  Just don’t let it find its way into your defensive armament.

Video: Brownells 3-Gun Team Clinches Title

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A group of shooters have clinched the title of Nation’s Best 3-Gun Team following a competition July 14-15, 2012, at the Peacemaker National Training Center in Glengary, West Virginia.

Nicknamed “Team NovesColt,” the shooters are Rob Romero (Noveske Shooting Team), Jansen Jones (Noveske Shooting Team) and Clint Upchurch (Colt professional shooter). They are sponsored by Brownells.

The trio finished the competition with 1,204 points, enough to clinch the title. They received a $6,000 cash prize from Colt for their win.


Get Hooked on 3-Gun

3-gun shooting competition bookThree-gun shooting is red hot. There’s never been a better time to get involved in this fun and challenging sport. Get started with the new book, Complete Guide to 3-Gun Competition. It’s packed with all the information you need to jump right and start competing.

Click here to order the Complete Guide to 3-Gun Competition for 22% off retail. (Special: Look for an even better discount July 20, 2012 during the Summer Sizzle Sale.)

 

 

Another popular sport is Cowboy Action Shooting. Click here to talk more about that on GunForums.com.

Former Thompson/Center Employees Form New Gun Manufacturer

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LHR Sporting Arms LLC logo
The new logo for LHR Sporting Arms LLC

Rochester, New York, lost about 200 manufacturing jobs last year when gun maker Thompson/Center Arms was relocated to Massachusetts by its parent company, Smith & Wesson. Now, some former T/C employees have formed a startup business, LHR Sporting Arms, LLC, and plan to manufacturer long-guns for hunters and target shooters.

As Foster’s Daily Democrat reported, “four of Thompson Center Arms’ former employees-Michael Garland, Mark Laney, Karl Ricker, and Patrick Hanley-are hoping to take advantage of the experienced workforce remaining in [Rochester] to manufacture their own firearms, with a business from scratch who opened in May.”

Hanley, sales and marketing director for LHR Sporting Arms, said a large proportion of former Thompson Center Arms employees were with the company for 30 years or more. When Thompson Center Arms moved out of state, only about seven of its employees transferred to the Springfield, Mass. facility.

“It gives us a great workforce to choose from,” Hanley told Foster’s. “The workforce was like a family … We kind of want to see if we can bring it back.”

Plans call for the company’s first rifle, “Redemption,” to be unveiled this upcoming winter.  By the end of 2013, LHR should have 20 or more employees on board.


Click here to download pricing and reference information for Thompson/Center Arms.

Gun Digest the Magazine August 13, 2012

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Gun Digest is the source for firearms news, pricing and guns for sale. With a subscription to Gun Digest, readers benefit from in-depth editorial expert advice, show reviews, how-to instructions and Second Amendment issues.

Click here to download this issue as a PDF from GunDigestStore.com.

Gun Digest the Magazine August 13 2012
Click the cover to subscribe to Gun Digest the Magazine

Inside This Issue

* Check out the special Tactical Gear section.

* The Ruger SP101 is a kit gun, a trail gun and a fun gun.

* Armourlite shatterproof watches can take a licking and keep on going.

* Gunsmithing: The Broomhandle Blues

* Trends of Values: Remington Firearms, Piotti & Randall Firearms

* Field Gun Review: The Mossberg Flex

* Performance Handloading: The .17 Hornet makes a comeback

* Precision Marksmanship: Quick sight adjustments in the wind

Did you receive a suspicious subscription offer? A bogus company is sending out Gun Digest subscription scams.

Why Keep Your Weapon Concealed? It Gives You The Advantage

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If you are in a fight for your life there are no rules. You must win and to do so you must always maintain a tactical advantage. You are reading this blog because you are

When the time comes to draw, make sure you use every tactical advantage.

law-abiding citizen who has chosen to go armed in public. If the unfortunate day comes that you must draw your gun remember these words: Maintain your advantage.

Take a look at this video.

In it you see two young thugs come into an Internet cafe in Florida. These “cafes” are really just online gambling halls that often deal with large amounts of cash, a prime target for armed robbery. Now, when the criminals come in, one armed with a bat, the other with a pistol, watch the man in the back, wearing white. This is almost textbook defensive pistol shooting from the 71-year-old hero. At the start of the robbery, he remains calm, but turns in his chair to assess the situation. He keeps his pistol concealed until the robber with the gun turns his back, then draws and fires when he has the greatest tactical advantage. If there is a concern about his action it could be that we can’t see where the other robbery victim was standing at the time of the first shot.  But I would say the “Greater Danger Theory” applies in this case. That is, the failure to act would cause a greater danger to you or others than your actions, so your actions, even if the situation is not perfect, are justified.

Also notice there does not appear to be any negotiations going on here. Don’t be fooled by TV shows and bad lawyers that you need to order a bad guy to drop his gun. It only takes a split second to put a pistol on target and pull the trigger and action defeats reaction every time. You could end up catching a bullet while you try to talk someone into dropping their gun. Instead, if a bad guy has a gun and has already displayed his intent to use it, shoot him, without discussion and without warning. Then shoot him again.

The reason I say “shoot him again” is simple: Your intent is to stop the threat. Have you heard the old axiom, “What does a person do after being shot with a pistol? The same thing he was doing before he was shot with a pistol.” Look at this video. Somewhere in the course of the exchange the bad guys were shot. Does it look like either of them are slowing down? Hell no. They were picking up speed as they hit the door. What if they had decided to run right at the citizen CCW carrier? One still had a gun, the other still had a bat. Both were still active threats who could have turned to fight at any time and again, action defeats reaction. Keep shooting until the threat is gone, then stop shooting.

Let’s talk about the bat. Is it a deadly weapon? Did he display his intent to use it? Yup on both counts. That’s why he got shot as well. Both men were later captured and now they get to tell their fellow inmates it was 71-year-old man who drove them off.

The moral of the story is this: This man did everything right. He very likely saved lives and he certainly gave two young men something to think about before they try to rob someone else. CCW works. Use it wisely.

If you are looking for gear to keep your concealed pistol secure, yet easily accessible, check out the Gun Digest Store. We have something for just about everyone.

 

 


Other great books for those who carry concealed handguns:

The Gun Digest Book of Concealed Carry

The Gun Digest Book of Combat Handgunnery

Effective Handgun Defense, A Comprehensive Guide to Concealed Carry

 

Find more resources atgundigeststore.com/tactical

 

Video: Security Camera Captures Man Shooting Robbers

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This incredible video from Gainesville.com shows a concealed carrier defending himself and the patrons of an Internet cafe against a pair of armed robbers. What would you have done in this situation? Do you think he reacted appropriately?

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