by UnaStamus on Sun Feb 09, 2014 2:11 am
Agencies who authorize rifles will do one of 3 things:
1. Buy rifles
2. Acquire DRMO/1033 military surplus rifles
3. Authorize officers to buy their own
In this case, my agency does both 1 & 2, but no officer is on the street with a .308win/7.62x51 battle rifle. We have an HK91 and several M14s that we acquired through DRMO. We have talked about getting these rifles into service with select officers, but the reality is that the M14s are very weathered and in marginal-to-poor condition. Getting an M14 through the door of a house would also be way too difficult and cumbersome. The HK91 is the next option, but we only have one, and it's a fixed stock with 18" barrel. For those familiar with the stocks on HK rifles and subguns, they're not made for people with short arms or big chests or body armor. Very long length of pull.
We have Colt LE6921 M4LE rifles with Aimpoint PRO sights in every squad car, so the department will not go out and buy heavier weapons right now. One of the SWAT snipers on our team (multi-county team) is in our agency and runs an AI AE MkIII bolt rifle for that. I'm looking for a rifle that will perform both tasks of patrol rifle and DMR/precision rifle. I am electing to buy a rifle with my own money to get the program off the ground. It's something that a lot of agencies out West and SW are doing. California Fish & Game issued all officers POF P308 rifles, which was a massive advantage for them when they had the shootout in the woods with Christopher Dorner. I think that in the next 10 years, we'll see a significant local increase in officers carrying precision ARs and accurate battle rifles. I want to be on the leading edge of that.
Realistically, the agency could request T&E rifles from companies and most companies will loan out a single rifle for upwards of a month. Some companies like HK or FN will send out a rep with a truck full of weapons and ammo to your range and put on a demonstration and let you go hands-on until you run out of ammo or you have to leave. My agency won't go to the extent of doing this process for a weapon that is not yet authorized by policy. I'm working on getting an interim policy in place to allow the T&E, and hopefully get a rifle on the road. I want my own rifle anyways, so it would work well for me to get one and use it as a basis for developing a model policy that could eventually become permanent.