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SSChameleon
12-05-2014, 18:31
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/12/05/austin-cop-sure-shot-stopped-crazed-gunman/

Holding the reins of two horses with one hand, Austin Police Sgt. Adam Johnson raised his service pistol and fired a bullseye into the target some 312 feet away.
Down went Larry McQuilliams, and so ended his rampage through the streets of the Texas capital, where he’d fired more than 100 rounds from his AK-47 and .22-caliber rifles at buildings. The shot, from Johnson’s Smith & Wesson M&P .40 pistol, hit McQuilliams square in the chest and made the 15-year-veteran the toast of gun enthusiasts around the country.

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“At a minimum, it was extraordinary shot,” said Army Maj. John Plaster, a retired Special Forces operator, long-range shooting expert and author of “The Ultimate Sniper: An Advanced Training Manual for Military and Police Snipers.”
It was not immediately clear if Johnson’s center-mass shot killed McQuilliams, or if the longtime criminal died from a self-inflicted shot a moment later. Results from an autopsy are pending, but there’s no disputing the improbably accurate bullet fired by Johnson brought a safe end to the Nov. 28 incident.

Johnson used a department issued Smith and Wesson M & P .40 pistol. (Smith and Wesson)


“It’s not impossible,” Plaster added. “Wild Bill Hickok shot bad guys from a hundred yards away with a handgun, but he was also a great shot.
“I would say what this officer did was phenomenal, especially if he didn’t brace his arm against anything.”
McQuilliams, 49, had multiple weapons, hundreds of rounds of ammunition and a map of 34 downtown buildings that likely were potential targets in his pre-dawn rampage the day after Thanksgiving, according to Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo. He’d already shot up the Mexican consulate, the federal courthouse and a downtown bank.
“For a guy to keep his composure and holding two horses with one hand and taking a one-hand shot with the other hand, it says a lot about the training and professionalism of our police department,” Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo said to the Austin American-Statesman (http://www.statesman.com/news/news/crime-law/holding-onto-horses-mounted-police-officer-ended-s/njHRN/).
Johnson, who works with the Mounted Patrol Unit, was about to get off duty and stabling the horses when he heard shots and returned fire at 2:33 a.m.
On Friday, Johnson, who is on routine administrative leave following the incident, made his first public appearance at a holiday charity event.
The sharpshooter told a local radio host he thanked God for being at the "right place at the right time."

Bunny
12-05-2014, 18:36
That is one hell of a good shot!

earplug
12-05-2014, 18:38
This might be a record of some sort. The previous long range pistol stop was a MP shooting a 9MM on the US post.

HoneyBadger
12-05-2014, 18:40
Holy smokes! That's a great shot from a bench, but standing while holding the reins of a couple of horses with your other hand? That's a helluva shot!

and I forget to mention... HE TOOK THAT SHOT IN THE DARK! It was 2:30am!

eta: what's the energy of that .40 round at 100yds? Apparently, enough to take a man down.

Dave_L
12-05-2014, 18:43
That can't be true. He used a .40. That round isn't even effective. ;)

But seriously, color me impressed.

Irving
12-05-2014, 19:12
M&P 40 is worthless and not accurate.

Zundfolge
12-05-2014, 19:16
Nice! However I suspect that even if he wasn't a cop he'd be a good shot.


Some of the best shooters I've ever met were cops and yet some of the worst shooters I've ever met were cops.

asmo
12-05-2014, 19:19
eta: what's the energy of that .40 round at 100yds? Apparently, enough to take a man down.

53259

The table uses a 100 yard zero so ignore that part. But its still 290 for a 165g Hydrashok.

Hound
12-05-2014, 19:39
Holy crap!!! [Wow2]

Duman
12-05-2014, 19:51
M&P 40 is worthless and not accurate.

Really?

Irving
12-05-2014, 19:53
Yep. Lucky shot.

hurley842002
12-05-2014, 19:53
M&P 40 is worthless and not accurate.


Really?
Lol

Bunny
12-05-2014, 20:39
Lucky shot or not, his M&P handled that situation.

Ah Pook
12-05-2014, 22:38
Really?
Newb, the satire owns you.





[LOL]

KAPA
12-05-2014, 23:18
How many rounds did he send downrange before the hit? Article doesn't seem to say. I would think the average shooter could put about a quarter of their rounds on a man sized target @ 100 yds. Any one of those makes contact with a mass shooter and we all know their next move is to eat their gun asap. Seems to be the case here. Still a great shot under stress, especially if it was shot 1.

flogger
12-05-2014, 23:25
Good guy 1, Bad guy 0.

earplug
12-05-2014, 23:27
We need to give the horses credit for standing still

earplug
12-06-2014, 00:02
Another lucky shot from 1994, mountain bike instead of a horse53271

theGinsue
12-06-2014, 00:06
This officer's shot was remarkable & definitely worthy of our praise & respect as citizens and as fellow shooters - particularly for stopping a potentially lethal shooter.

While very different, there are interesting similarities to an incident in 1994 at Fairchild AFB...

This might be a record of some sort. The previous long range pistol stop was a MP shooting a 9MM on the US post.
Yep, I believe you are referring to the Fairchild AFB Hospital event (http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=8767).


Meanwhile, Senior Airman Andrew P. Brown, age 25, with the 92nd Air Force Security Police Squadron, was patrolling the base’s housing areas on a bicycle when he received an emergency call on his two-way radio. He pedaled a quarter-mile to the scene and, while still some 70 yards away, spotted Mellberg shooting at scores of panic-stricken people in the parking lot.

Brown ditched his bicycle and ordered the gunman to drop his weapon. When Mellberg turned and shot at him, Brown dropped into a combat crouch and returned fire with his 9mm Beretta M9 semiautomatic pistol. He fired four rounds at Mellberg; two missed, one hit him in the shoulder and one struck him between the eyes, instantly ending his homicidal rampage. The drum magazine in Mellberg’s MAK-90 still held 19 rounds of ammunition.

Beretta M9's, in my experience, are not the most accurate firearm. It (in my opinion) takes an amazing shooter to consistently perform well with one of them. So, that, with the fact that this USAF Security Police (they were still "SP's", not "Security Forces" back then) had just ridden his patrol bicycle 1/4 mile to respond to the hospital, earns a huge amount of my respect.

ETA: Damn! Earplug beat me by 4 minutes. I took too long to type it up.

osok-308
12-06-2014, 09:12
When I first heard this story my thought was: "damn, how can I get this good?"

Blowby
12-06-2014, 09:22
First get a couple horses...

copfish
12-06-2014, 09:42
Better to be lucky than good. Either way, one hell of a shot. [HiFive]

Limited GM
12-06-2014, 19:12
Once is luck, twice is durn lucky, three times is skill.

Aloha_Shooter
12-06-2014, 21:28
I don't see someone even trying a shot like that unless he's either damned good or arrogantly cocky. I'm figuring the former.

Irving
12-06-2014, 21:30
I don't see someone even trying a shot like that unless he's either damned good or arrogantly cocky. I'm figuring the former.

In before this turns into either the 3rd, or 4th (I don't remember) failed "Put up of shut up!" challenge thread!

Ah Pook
12-06-2014, 22:07
In before this turns into either the 3rd, or 4th (I don't remember) failed "Put up of shut up!" challenge thread!
I could make the shot with a .380 from the hip.

Singlestack
12-07-2014, 07:58
"M&P Perfection"

68Charger
12-07-2014, 08:00
Don't mess with Texas

T-Giv
12-10-2014, 07:56
Pure beast mode. However, I think they should outlaw 40's for modern LE. I mean if Michael Brown was not a threat while trying to disarm Wilson how could this cop in Austin possibly know that the guy he put down was a threat from that distance? Cops shouldn't be able to reach out that far! Certainly no more ARs!