Training >> Browse Articles >> DEPUTY'S OBSERVATIONS: By Frank Hinkle

+38

DEPUTY’S OBSERVATIONS: Why Do We Carry Handguns?

DEPUTY’S OBSERVATIONS:  Why Do We Carry Handguns?

The Commander’s weapon of choice was a .38 S&W Chief Special wearing a Barami Hip Grip.

Frank Hinkle

Why do we carry handguns? It was a question asked of me many years ago while I had the honor to serve as the bailiff to a judge of the Superior Court. He was a remarkable man who spent most of his career as a top prosecutor in the District Attorney’s office, but for three-years he served as one of the most respected judges of our criminal courts. It was one of the most interesting times in my career.

We called him “The Commander,” a nickname that had been pinned on him by his colleagues in the DA’s office. Many of them served as officers in our nation’s military reserves, and at the same time that he became the chief-deputy of a branch office he also attained the rank of Commander in the U.S. Navy Reserve. He eventually retired at the rank of captain, but there was just something about the moniker “The Commander” that fit him and it stuck with him for years.

“The Commander” was an exceptional leader. His Navy service had all been in “line units” in Naval Aviation. He was an electrical engineer by training and had served as a Naval Flight Officer on antisubmarine bombers, including an assignment to Vietnam immediately after the Gulf of Tonkin Incident.

“The Commander” was a common sense guy. No matter how complex of a legal issue that faced him, he always broke it down to its core elements, applied the applicable law and moved forward. I don’t ever recall him having to stop and take an objection under advisement and research it later; he just used common sense and made a ruling.

One of his most remarkable qualities as a leader was that he dedicated himself to teaching us on his staff something everyday. He had no obligation to do so, but everyday he tried to teach our clerk and court reporter and myself something. It might be a complex legal issue, Oriental philosophy or something of a mechanical nature, but everyday we learned something from him, and we were better employees and people for it. In later years I tried to do the same for the young deputies that I worked with.

“The Commander” was a life-long “gun guy” and carried a concealed weapon most of his adult life; a fact that his flight crewmembers appreciated. Flying patrols from Japan out over the open ocean they found it reassuring that “The Lieutenant” had a snub-nosed .38 in his flight suit pocket. Later when they were assigned to Vietnam all of the flight crewmembers were issued WWII era revolvers. While they were all gathered in the barracks being briefed, “The Lieutenant” was selecting which old revolvers his crewmen were going to carry, and he selected the best of the bunch. “The Lieutenant” looked after his crew.

One day “The Commander” accosted me with the question, “Why do we carry handguns?” I was stumped for an answer and muttered something feeble, like “Because they make us look sexy?” Being a gentleman he let that go. He did not expect me to answer his question, and we both knew that he was only couching a statement in the form of a question to encourage me to think about it.

“We carry handguns,” he told me in his crisp, precise way of speaking, “because we do not expect trouble.” That was my lesson for the day: We carry handguns because we do not expect trouble. To my credit I was able to extrapolate that out to the next level: If we expect trouble then we bring a long gun. But since we don’t expect trouble but are aware that trouble might still visit us, we go armed with a handgun.

That was one of the most important lessons that I ever learned during my law enforcement career. Of all of the classes I took in Criminal Justice, starting in high school and through community collage, the academy, Advanced Officer schools (aka “retread school”) and later “Regional Officer Training” (aka “Rot,” which it usually was) plus all of the seminars and survival schools that I attended on my own, that one observation about carrying a handgun made the biggest impression on me of all. Not to say that I did not learn important things from all of my advanced training classes and survival seminars, because I did. But that one basic rule about defensive handguns and offensive long guns opened my eyes and made me think about what I was doing and how to view a situation. I had always been pragmatic about my assignments, expecting and planning for trouble even when the sergeant, who was not going to be leaving his office and going with me, was sure that “Everything would be OK and everybody will get along and we will sing ‘Kum ba yah’ together afterwards.” Funny, beforehand they always had the utmost confidence in my abilities to bring a situation to a peaceful resolution while afterwards they exhibited no confidence in my judgment, expected numerous complaints & law suits and bemoaned the day that I had been assigned to their quiet and peaceful world in Neverland. Until the next time that they assigned me to deal with a potentially dangerous assignment and still did not volunteer to go out into the field to cover me.

I actually refined that lesson one more step: But because we are aware of the sudden and violent nature of criminal attacks we carry .45s. I don’t mean that only those of us who carry pistols chambered for the .45 ACP cartridge can call ourselves “warriors.” I mean that you should carry the largest pistol of the largest caliber that you can conceal, and shoot competently. For some that is a small 2” revolver or a compact .380 ACP pocket pistol. It is more important to have “some gun” than “no gun.” “The Commander “ always preached to me, “A hit with a .22 is more important than a miss with a .45.” His weapon of choice was a .38 Smith & Wesson Chief Special wearing a Barami Hip Grip. (www.baramihipgrip.com.) He always carried it, and he was an expert shot with it.

My first partner in Fugitive Investigations, “Big Al” Culbertson, carried a Charter Arms Bulldog 5-shot .44 Special revolver. He was a competitive shooter and our range master & armorer. He was our “one-man SWAT Team” and he could shoot circles around me, literally. I was carrying so many guns and so much extra ammunition that I could hardly make it out of our unmarked car, and my biggest fear was of being attacked by a magnet. Had I ever fallen down I would probably have to low-crawl around until I found something to pull myself upright. “Big Al” also carried a .357 Magnum revolver and 500 rounds along with a sawed-off double-barreled 12-gauge shotgun in the trunk of our “cool car,” but he knocked on doors with just the five-rounds of .44 Special in his weapon and none of us quibbled with him about it. For him with his skill level, that was “enough gun” for just about any situation that he could expect to face. What was in the trunk was for when “Big Al” expected trouble.

Stay safe, and stay alert.


+38
  • Piccbppost_max50

    CBPTOPHER4340

    2 months ago

    286 comments

    Ourstanding Food For Thought!

  • Dsc01186_sq90_max50

    ArmyMP

    8 months ago

    248 comments

    I used to work for a Sheriff (Copboe, you know who I am talking about), who's thinking was "How are you going to be the police without a gun?". A badge doesn't get you very far with a violent suspect without the threat of "Deadly Force" to back it up if needed. Go to a robbery and hold up only your badge and see what happens. As a Military Policeman, I am not considered a "Law Enforcement Officer" so I am not allowed to carry off-duty, and I am stationed in the great liberal state of California where it is damn near inpossible to get a concealed carry license (any thoughts on that subject). So I sometimes find myself in a hypocritical, ethical problem (not that I would "illegaly carry" a handgun).

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    DarkKnightWoman

    8 months ago

    10 comments

    I agree with the Authors opinions

  • 1026081622a_max50

    mar10inla

    8 months ago

    112 comments

    I really enjoyed reading your article.

  • Wade_max50

    copboe

    8 months ago

    30 comments

    Excellent Article. Interestingly enough I had a Sgt. (with 30 years in Law Enforcement) tell me the same thing that the "Commander" told you “A hit with a .22 is more important than a miss with a .45.” My (former) Sgt. is my "Commander" if you will. He too made sure all of his "Sons and Daughters" (as he called us) learned something new on every call and every conversation that we had with him, even now if I have a question or concern I call him to get his comments or opinion. Thanks again Frank.

  • Shut_the_fuck_up_street_cleaners_police_cars_max50

    nfpd352

    8 months ago

    412 comments

    Outstanding article, very insightful and informative. Thanks Frank...

  • Me_at_mork_max50

    lynettesman

    8 months ago

    388 comments

    Amen, Dammit. I wear a gun on my hip to diswayed trouble. The gun in my hand is to deal with trouble. As my trainer said "When you pull a weapon be prepared to shoot. But when you shoot shoot to kill. But never carry a weapon you don't know how to shoot."

  • Sheepdog_wolf_max50

    shillxsh

    8 months ago

    42 comments

    Very true. Great read.

  • Imgp0006_max50

    AnnaLee

    8 months ago

    134 comments

    That one little saying from the Commander is so true. I never really thought of it before, but it so applies (even to me).

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    car9

    8 months ago

    14 comments

    thanks for the insight..great article

  • M_6b5991888f425dca83f77389847f1c2b_max50

    shorey

    8 months ago

    34 comments

    That was very informative. "The Commander" gave a great point about guns.

  • Germanweba_max50

    Beau900Dowdy

    8 months ago

    34 comments

    Great article!! It makes you thik and I share your opinion.

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    oldman

    8 months ago

    14 comments

    Outstanding article that brought the point home. I will pass this on to everyone in the department. I wished I had someone like the " Commander" to mentor me.

  • Trooper_c_stalker_max50

    Stalker975

    8 months ago

    572 comments

    Great write up!

  • Biap_max50

    Rscheiterle

    8 months ago

    970 comments

    Excellent article!!!

Post a link to something interesting from another site, or submit your own original writing for the Police Link community to read.

Submit a Story

Recent Activity

Picture_157_max30
physh247srt commented on: glockgoddess's photo: "GETTIN' READY FOR NEW YEARS 08", less than a minute ago.
Pictures_old_085_max30
srodep2061 commented on: "Craig Yoder", less than a minute ago.
Patch_bridge_r5_100_max30
rescue5squad343 gave a thumbs up to The Article "Two Day Standoff with Ex-Chief Ends Peacefully", 2 minutes ago.
Patch_bridge_r5_100_max30
rescue5squad343 gave a thumbs down to The Article "Police Chief Indicted in Boy's Uzi Death", 2 minutes ago.
04_24_0_max30
harrisja6 posted in: "Officer James Greene 12/03/2008", 3 minutes ago.