6/25/2015 9:40:58 AM
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Section 4: Guns/General Subject: Police 1930 CPD Msg# 923696
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I have an Irish cousin who is an interviewer for the Garda in Dublin (Garda is the Irish Police Force) and her boyfriend at the time was a 6'4 strapping guy who was awarded the honor of patrolling the streets of Dublin at night armed with OC Spray, an ASP Baton, and a radio along with a pad of paper and a pen. It astonished me. The Irish take great pride in their unarmed police. He told me that the past 3-4 years it had gotten a lot harder to do the job with all of the immigration from the EU coming in where the Garda was getting a lot of declining respect and a lot more pushback from street toughs. He was thinking there was going to be a reckoning one night where a Garda was seriously injured or killed. Since all I had on me in Ireland was a Tactical Pen, I gave it to him and demonstrated what it could be used for. He was happy to get it.
Now, when my cousin was over visiting friends in this area we grabbed dinner with the family. She was astonished at all the gear the police here carry and she about flipped when she saw one of our County's finest (Fairfax County, VA) had an M-4 Carbine in the patrol car. I had to ask her who among the Garda over there in Dublin could carry a firearm. She mentioned only certain detectives were authorized to and they carried S&W Model 10 Revolvers in .38 SPL. They were only used in the most deadly of circumstances. I mentioned that the US had a fairly large gang problem in urban centers and that there were a lot of armed confrontations with the police in comparison to Ireland where it simply doesn't happen. |
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For reference, the above message is a reply to a message where: In the 1930s it was common to have a Thompson SMG in a two man car. Nowadays a two man car has a Remington 870 or a M-16 on board (the M-16 is semi-auto only). The M-16s were given to us by the US Army at no cost. When I was hired by the PD we had Army surplus M-1A rifles in the armory! |