For the record, I think the agents involved did nothing short of a phenomenal job.Jerry Dove got a center hit on Platt in a fraction of a second, from a distance of 30 feet while Platt was sliding across the hood of a car! Mcneill got two good hits to Mattix’ face and neck. Orrantia and Risner got hits on a moving target from a distance of almost 100 feet. Mireles got hits with the use of only one arm. All of this with the agents shooting from bright light into a dimly lit area and not on one-dimensional paper targets but on subjects that were shooting back!
I agree. I think there is one truth evident here: Mr. Murphy is often the first one through the door, or on the scene. This takedown/surveillance did not go according to plan, and the agents were behind the power curve, in no small part due to Platt & Matix already having decided they were going to kill rather than be arrested, and were well-prepared to do so. In the OODA loop, they were already one or two steps ahead of the FBI agents. That said, those agents fought so bravely under withering fire that I am in awe.
Better SOPs are a product of evolution and experience, and unfortunately sometimes good officers are killed in the process, before their mistakes or flawed tactics can be used to train others, so it seems. As Dave Armstrong says, you have to keep the context of the times in mind too. Ex: The CA Highway Patrol had the infamous Newhall shooting change their firearms training SOPs. One of the dead CHPs was found with his spent brass in his pocket. In the middle of a gunfight (using revos), he caught his empties and put them in his pocket. Why? Because that's what they did in practice, so the range would stay nice and neat. That was when the "do it in training the way you should do it for real" idea really took hold. Practice like you'd have to fight. Today, those Miami FBI agents would have probably been SWAT members, armed with ARs and MP5s, body armor on, better trained and ready to rock, etc.
This is not to talk about fault so much as to point out those little things that can screw up your world.
Exactly, Art. That's why you play the "what if" game, to try to anticipate what you would do if...
I'm just a lowly reserve deputy, but I always try to tell myself, on every traffic stop or seemingly innocent call, "This could be the one." As a Marine friend told me, "Always be polite, professional, but have a plan to kill everyone in front of you." Sounds extreme to a non-LEO or sheeple, but it could save your life. As Dave A says, "No plan survives contact with the enemy" but you'd better have some kind of a plan anyway, or better, A, B, C etc, and be able to switch pronto.
disclaimer: I'm no HSLD dude, in fact LSHD! Interesting topic though, and I've read about, discussed, and pondered it and other incidents a fair bit.