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Author Topic: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job  (Read 1437 times)

Offline sjwsti

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Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« on: May 01, 2013, 02:23:22 PM »
Good read.

http://www.policeone.com/police-heroes/articles/6199620-Why-one-cop-carries-145-rounds-of-ammo-on-the-job/


Before the call that changed Sergeant Timothy Gramins’ life forever, he typically carried 47 rounds of handgun ammunition on his person while on duty.

Today, he carries 145, “every day, without fail.”

He detailed the gunfight that caused the difference in a gripping presentation at the annual conference of the Assn. of SWAT Personnel-Wisconsin.

The most threatening encounter in Gramins’ nearly two-decade career with the Skokie (Ill.) PD north of Chicago came on a lazy August afternoon prior to his promotion to sergeant, on his first day back from a family vacation. He was about to take a quick break from his patrol circuit to buy a Star Wars game at a shopping center for his son’s eighth birthday.

An alert flashed out that a male black driving a two-door white car had robbed a bank at gunpoint in another suburb 11 miles north and had fled in an unknown direction. Gramins was only six blocks from a major expressway that was the most logical escape route into the city.

Unknown at the time, the suspect, a 37-year-old alleged Gangster Disciple, had vowed that he would kill a police officer if he got stopped.

“I’ve got a horseshoe up my ass when it comes to catching suspects,” Gramins laughs. He radioed that he was joining other officers on the busy expressway lanes to scout traffic.

He was scarcely up to highway speed when he spotted a lone male black driver in a white Pontiac Bonneville and pulled alongside him. “He gave me ‘the Look,’ that oh-crap-there’s-the-police look, and I knew he was the guy,” Gramins said.

Gramins dropped behind him. Then in a sudden, last-minute move the suspect accelerated sharply and swerved across three lanes of traffic to roar up an exit ramp. “I’ve got one running!” Gramins radioed.

The next thing he knew, bullets were flying. “That was four years ago,” Gramins said. “Yet it could be ten seconds ago.”

With Gramins following close behind, siren blaring and lights flashing, the Bonneville zigzagged through traffic and around corners into a quite pocket of single-family homes a few blocks from the exit. Then a few yards from where a 10-year-old boy was skateboarding on a driveway, the suspect abruptly squealed to a stop.

“He bailed out and ran headlong at me with a 9 mm Smith in his hand while I was still in my car,” Gramins said.

The gunman sank four rounds into the Crown Vic’s hood while Gramins was drawing his .45-cal. Glock 21.

“I didn’t have time to think of backing up or even ramming him,” Gramins said. “I see the gun and I engage.”

Gramins fired back through his windshield, sending a total of 13 rounds tearing through just three holes.

A master firearms instructor and a sniper on his department’s Tactical Intervention Unit, “I was confident at least some of them were hitting him, but he wasn’t even close to slowing down,” Gramins said.

The gunman shot his pistol dry trying to hit Gramins with rounds through his driver-side window, but except for spraying the officer’s face with glass, he narrowly missed and headed back to his car.

Gramins, also empty, escaped his squad — “a coffin,” he calls it — and reloaded on his run to cover behind the passenger-side rear of the Bonneville.

Now the robber, a lanky six-footer, was back in the fight with a .380 Bersa pistol he’d grabbed off his front seat. Rounds flew between the two as the gunman dashed toward the squad car.

Again, Gamins shot dry and reloaded.

“I thought I was hitting him, but with shots going through his clothing it was hard to tell for sure. This much was certain: he kept moving and kept shooting, trying his damnedest to kill me.”

In this free-for-all, the assailant had, in fact, been struck 14 times. Any one of six of these wounds — in the heart, right lung, left lung, liver, diaphragm, and right kidney — could have produced fatal consequences…“in time,” Gramins emphasizes.

But time for Gramins, like the stack of bullets in his third magazine, was fast running out.

In his trunk was an AR-15; in an overhead rack inside the squad, a Remington 870.

But reaching either was impractical. Gramins did manage to get himself to a grassy spot near a tree on the curb side of his vehicle where he could prone out for a solid shooting platform.

The suspect was in the street on the other side of the car. “I could see him by looking under the chassis,” Gramins recalls. “I tried a couple of ricochet rounds that didn’t connect. Then I told myself, ‘Hey, I need to slow down and aim better.’ ”

When the suspect bent down to peer under the car, Gramins carefully established a sight picture, and squeezed off three controlled bursts in rapid succession.

Each round slammed into the suspect’s head — one through each side of his mouth and one through the top of his skull into his brain. At long last the would-be cop killer crumpled to the pavement.

The whole shootout had lasted 56 seconds, Gramins said. The assailant had fired 21 rounds from his two handguns. Inexplicably — but fortunately — he had not attempted to employ an SKS semi-automatic rifle that was lying on his front seat ready to go.

Gramins had discharged 33 rounds. Four remained in his magazine.

Two houses and a parked Mercedes in the vicinity had been struck by bullets, but with no casualties. The young skateboarder had run inside yelling at his dad to call 911 as soon as the battle started and also escaped injury. Despite the fusillade of lead sent his way, Gramins’ only damage besides glass cuts was a wound to his left shin. His dominant emotion throughout his brush with death, he recalls, was “feeling very alone, with no one to help me but myself.”

Remarkably, the gunman was still showing vital signs when EMS arrived. Sheer determination, it seemed, kept him going, for no evidence of drugs or alcohol was found in his system.

He was transported to a trauma center where Gramins also was taken. They shared an ER bay with only a curtain between them as medical personnel fought unsuccessfully to save the robber’s life.

At one point Gramins heard a doctor exclaim, “We may as well stop. Every bag of blood we give him ends up on the floor. This guy’s like Swiss cheese. Why’d that cop have to shoot him so many times!”

Gramins thought, “He just tried to kill me! Where’s that part of it?”

When Gramins was released from the hospital, “I walked out of there a different person,” he said.

“Being in a shooting changes you. Killing someone changes you even more.” As a devout Catholic, some of his changes involved a deepening spirituality and philosophical reflections, he said without elaborating.

At least one alteration was emphatically practical.

Before the shooting, Gramins routinely carried 47 rounds of handgun ammo on his person, including two extra magazines for his Glock 21 and 10 rounds loaded in a backup gun attached to his vest, a 9 mm Glock 26.

Now unfailingly he goes to work carrying 145 handgun rounds, all 9 mm. These include three extra 17-round magazines for his primary sidearm (currently a Glock 17), plus two 33-round mags tucked in his vest, as well as the backup gun. Besides all that, he’s got 90 rounds for the AR-15 that now rides in a rack up front.

Paranoia?

Gramins shook his head and said “Preparation.”

Expert Analysis

Lessons learned from facing an “invincible” assailant
By Charles Remsberg

Sgt. Timothy Gramins who fired 17 .45-cal. rounds into a hell-bent suspect before putting him down offers these lessons learned from his extraordinary fight for his life:

1.) Beef up your ammo reserves. “A lot more rounds are being exchanged in today’s gunfights than in the past. With offenders carrying heavier weapons, going on patrol with just a handgun and two extra magazines no longer cuts it. Carry more ammo. Always have a backup gun. Carry a loaded rifle where you can reach it. I can’t express how quickly your firearm will go empty when you’re shooting for real. There’s no worse feeling than pulling the trigger and hearing it go ‘click’.”

2.) Practice head shots. “When you fire multiple ‘lethal’ rounds into an attacker and he keeps going, you don’t have the luxury of waiting 20 or 40 more seconds for him to die while he can still shoot at you. Don’t waste time arguing the relative merits of various calibers. No handgun rounds have reliable stopping power with body shots. Pick the round you can shoot best and practice shooting at the suspect’s head.”



About the author
Charles Remsberg co-founded the original Street Survival Seminar and the Street Survival Newsline, authored three of the best-selling law enforcement training textbooks, and helped produce numerous award-winning training videos. His nearly three decades of work earned him the prestigious O.W. Wilson Award for outstanding contributions to law enforcement and the American Police Hall of Fame Honor Award for distinguished achievement in public service.

Buy Charles Remsberg's latest book, Blood Lessons, which takes you inside more than 20 unforgettable confrontations where officers' lives are on the line.
"It's not what you know that will get you into trouble; it's what you know that isn't true"

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Offline GreyGeek

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2013, 02:48:00 PM »
Gramins heard a doctor exclaim, “We may as well stop. Every bag of blood we give him ends up on the floor. This guy’s like Swiss cheese. Why’d that cop have to shoot him so many times!”

People without experience or knowledge always ask ignorant questions.   We've seen a LOT of those kinds of questions, often meant more as a negative rhetorical comment than a question. "Why does anyone need a 30 round clip?"   "Why does anyone need an assault rifle?"


Because the bad guys have that stuff and more, and the police are only minutes away when seconds count.

Offline gsd

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #2 on: May 01, 2013, 03:32:38 PM »
People wonder why I carry 2 spare mags...I usually tell them it is due to the potential of a situation just like this.
It is highly likely the above post may offend you. I'm fine with that.

Offline SS_N_NE

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #3 on: May 01, 2013, 08:09:02 PM »
These kind of stories put ammunition capacity in stark necessity.

It has become obvious to me that the entire type and capacity of firearms is not the issue with politicians.  They have access to these type accounts or have been provided with similar stories. Fact is that it doesn't suit their agenda (which has nothing to do with types of firearms or magazine capacity).

It is always amazing how trained LEO need many rounds to engage a criminal. Or, instances of hundreds of round fired against criminals with minimal damage to the criminal (considering the number of rounds fired). Then politicians choose to limit how many rounds citizens can posses for their own protection?

Offline gsd

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #4 on: May 01, 2013, 10:48:15 PM »
i feel the need to clarify given the previous post...my 2 spare mags only total 14 rounds:)
It is highly likely the above post may offend you. I'm fine with that.

Offline JW-E154

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #5 on: May 02, 2013, 02:24:18 AM »
I will never say how many I carry on duty, Just know I am always prepared for the wolf.
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Offline GreyGeek

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #6 on: May 02, 2013, 08:24:04 PM »
The  OP reminded me of an article I read which stated that each terrorist shot in Iraq required firing 50,000 rounds of ammo.  I can believe it.  All I have to do is watch the following video of a patrol in Afghanistan.  The guy with the camera is just sticking his AR-15 over the wall and sending off 20 rounds.  It is obvious that he can't see what he is shooting at nor does he even know where his bullets are hitting.  The dust clouds everything.  They must be making a lot of use of "suppressive fire".


Watching clips of the Syrian war shows soldiers on both sides doing the same thing ... spraying bullets  down range.   Only the snipers seem to use "one shot - one kill" ....   until you see a sniper using a semi-auto .50 cal.
« Last Edit: May 02, 2013, 08:28:23 PM by GreyGeek »

Offline RedDot

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #7 on: May 03, 2013, 11:06:14 PM »
I still have trouble believing the perp wasn't on something. I would assume the cop was using some sort of HP and that many .45 rounds should have shattered bones and "jellied" the whole chest cavity.  I can only assume the toxicology was inadvertantly done on a sample of the transfused blood still in the guy.

Offline sjwsti

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Re: Why one cop carries 145 rounds of ammo on the job
« Reply #8 on: May 04, 2013, 10:21:26 AM »
I still have trouble believing the perp wasn't on something. I would assume the cop was using some sort of HP and that many .45 rounds should have shattered bones and "jellied" the whole chest cavity.  I can only assume the toxicology was inadvertantly done on a sample of the transfused blood still in the guy.

I dont think its hard to believe at all. Could the toxicology test have missed something? Its possible. Its also possible that his guy was just one bad dude. Ive got numerous documented accounts of very similar incidents were the BG was stone sober and continued to fight, despite numerous fatal injuries, right up to the point were their body gave out.
We read about military personell doing similar things in combat. Are they "on something"? 

Handgun bullets, including HP, only make holes. There is only a small secondary wound cavity (lateral energy) produced with any handgun caliber you will carry (no jelly). High velocity wounds are very different and you need to get over aprox 2200 FPS before you see severe secondary cavity wounding.

Caliber alone wont save you if you cross paths with a guy like this. Sergeant Gramins’ used a number of skills to survive and win. Mindset, point shooting, movement, use of cover, reloads, eventually being able to transition to sighted fire to make headshots, plus a little bit of luck. How many of us are really prepared to perform like this outside the sterile confines of a square range? Are you training to fight or just practicing to shoot?

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