Paul wrote:So where is the failure or break down in the training process that this is needed? Or is it just a lack of familiarity/absence from the weapon? From the guard folks I know, it sounds like time spent training with weapons is minimal.
I saw it needed for two reasons:
Lack of people understanding the simple instruction: "Keep the booger hook off the bang switch!"
Lack of weapons handling skills.
Take a college student who lived in town all his life and they just don't spend a lot of time with a gun. (most not all) People go to the range and I would see it all the time. Insert a magazine and the first thing their finger does is go to the trigger. I harped on my line safeties over this ALL the time. Both as as Safety officer and a range officer.
Now take them off the range and it became a huge safety issue. I kept seeing the same actions and reactions. Comments wouldn't do much.
Fire off a blank and everyone in the immediate area hears it. You can NOT hide that fact. Your actions suddenly become real with real reactions. A ND with a blank was handled the same as a ND with a live round.
Translate that to every day John Q. Public and the local police, you will (experience again here) see the same thing. Some folks are really good about their discipline. Others are not.
For those that get into a habit of putting the booger hook on the bang switch as they draw. You get a ND. And that's why you have an article like the OP here.
And THAT is no accident. It's negligent.