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Police Snipers Get Only One Chance to Be on the Mark
SAN DIEGO Chuck Foster is part of an elite group, prepared to kill with surgical precision to save lives.
In police forces around the nation, marksmen like him are called snipers, sharpshooters or hermes grace kelly bag faux long riflemen. They are trained to "neutralize" a suspect with a single shot when negotiations fail and civilians or fellow officers are in imminent danger of being killed.
"You don't use deadly force unless it's in defense of yours or another's life," said Foster, who fired the shot that ended the San Ysidro McDonald's massacre the worst single day shooting by one man in the nation's history.
He remembers waiting that July afternoon in 1984, poised on a rooftop, peering at the gunman through the scope of his high powered rifle.
Get a 'Good Bead'
"He was the only person moving. He had his Uzi with him," Foster said in a recent interview. "I was trying to get a good bead on him. I waited until he paused next to one of the bodies on the floor."
Foster's single shot grace kelly purse faux smashed into the chest of James Oliver Huberty, ending a 77 minute blood bath that left 21 people dead and 20 others injured.
It was after earlier blood baths that police special weapons and tactics teams were first formed.
The next year, Charles Joseph Whitman, 25, horrified hermes kelly bags Knockoff the nation when he picked off pedestrians from a tower at the University of Texas in Austin. By day's end, there were 16 dead and 31 wounded.
Rifles Not Effective
Austin police were equipped with outmoded hunting rifles that were not effective against Whitman, perched 231 feet above the campus. Officers finally stormed the tower and killed the gunman.
Later that year, the Los Angeles Police Department organized its SWAT team, one of the first in the nation.
"About all it was was a counter sniper team," said Jeff Rogers, a Los Angeles SWAT platoon leader. "Most of the people selected for it were selected because they had their own high power hunting rifles."
Twenty years later, the sniper is an integral part of special weapons teams around the nation, from the FBI's to the Austin Police Department's 12 man unit.
Snipers are typically competitive, high achieving officers in their late 20s to early 40s. It's a young officer's game because agility is a requirement. But a sniper also must have about five years' experience before being considered for selection.
'Ultimate in Excitement'
"It's a good career move for some," said Michael R. Mantell, the San Diego Police Department's chief psychologist. "Some see it as a chance to engage in the ultimate in excitement in the police department."
With short, reddish brown hair and freckles, Foster looks younger than his hermes kelly pochette fake 29 years. A Green Beret who never saw combat, Foster is second in command of San Diego's 10 man rifle team. He's been a sniper for four years.
"It fell in line with my military skills, which I enjoy, and it offers a little more excitement," said Foster, who lives with his wife in the San Diego area. "I enjoyed rifle shooting ever since high school, so it seemed a logical progression."
Other snipers had little experience with weapons before joining their departments and still don't consider themselves gun enthusiasts.
"I work very hard on that while I'm on duty, but I don't consider that a sport for my own time," said Randy Fredrickson, 33, who has been a Los Angeles police sniper for three years.
Some Overly Aggressive
Some departments, including Los Angeles, would rather train their snipers from the beginning, and shy away from overly aggressive gun enthusiasts.
"The No. 1 qualities are maturity, good judgment and good physical condition," Rogers said. "We don't consider anyone who's been involved in an out of policy shooting. We don't consider anyone with a discipline problem."
While the nation's police snipers train regularly with sophisticated weapons, they seldom use their skill.
Collectively, however, police snipers make headlines across the nation.
In December, 1985, a police sniper in Cincinnati fired a single bullet that killed a 20 year old heroin addict who held two teen age brothers hostage during a 30 hour siege.
SAN DIEGO Chuck Foster is part of an elite group, prepared to kill with surgical precision to save lives.
In police forces around the nation, marksmen like him are called snipers, sharpshooters or hermes grace kelly bag faux long riflemen. They are trained to "neutralize" a suspect with a single shot when negotiations fail and civilians or fellow officers are in imminent danger of being killed.
"You don't use deadly force unless it's in defense of yours or another's life," said Foster, who fired the shot that ended the San Ysidro McDonald's massacre the worst single day shooting by one man in the nation's history.
He remembers waiting that July afternoon in 1984, poised on a rooftop, peering at the gunman through the scope of his high powered rifle.
Get a 'Good Bead'
"He was the only person moving. He had his Uzi with him," Foster said in a recent interview. "I was trying to get a good bead on him. I waited until he paused next to one of the bodies on the floor."
Foster's single shot grace kelly purse faux smashed into the chest of James Oliver Huberty, ending a 77 minute blood bath that left 21 people dead and 20 others injured.
It was after earlier blood baths that police special weapons and tactics teams were first formed.
The next year, Charles Joseph Whitman, 25, horrified hermes kelly bags Knockoff the nation when he picked off pedestrians from a tower at the University of Texas in Austin. By day's end, there were 16 dead and 31 wounded.
Rifles Not Effective
Austin police were equipped with outmoded hunting rifles that were not effective against Whitman, perched 231 feet above the campus. Officers finally stormed the tower and killed the gunman.
Later that year, the Los Angeles Police Department organized its SWAT team, one of the first in the nation.
"About all it was was a counter sniper team," said Jeff Rogers, a Los Angeles SWAT platoon leader. "Most of the people selected for it were selected because they had their own high power hunting rifles."
Twenty years later, the sniper is an integral part of special weapons teams around the nation, from the FBI's to the Austin Police Department's 12 man unit.
Snipers are typically competitive, high achieving officers in their late 20s to early 40s. It's a young officer's game because agility is a requirement. But a sniper also must have about five years' experience before being considered for selection.
'Ultimate in Excitement'
"It's a good career move for some," said Michael R. Mantell, the San Diego Police Department's chief psychologist. "Some see it as a chance to engage in the ultimate in excitement in the police department."
With short, reddish brown hair and freckles, Foster looks younger than his hermes kelly pochette fake 29 years. A Green Beret who never saw combat, Foster is second in command of San Diego's 10 man rifle team. He's been a sniper for four years.
"It fell in line with my military skills, which I enjoy, and it offers a little more excitement," said Foster, who lives with his wife in the San Diego area. "I enjoyed rifle shooting ever since high school, so it seemed a logical progression."
Other snipers had little experience with weapons before joining their departments and still don't consider themselves gun enthusiasts.
"I work very hard on that while I'm on duty, but I don't consider that a sport for my own time," said Randy Fredrickson, 33, who has been a Los Angeles police sniper for three years.
Some Overly Aggressive
Some departments, including Los Angeles, would rather train their snipers from the beginning, and shy away from overly aggressive gun enthusiasts.
"The No. 1 qualities are maturity, good judgment and good physical condition," Rogers said. "We don't consider anyone who's been involved in an out of policy shooting. We don't consider anyone with a discipline problem."
While the nation's police snipers train regularly with sophisticated weapons, they seldom use their skill.
Collectively, however, police snipers make headlines across the nation.
In December, 1985, a police sniper in Cincinnati fired a single bullet that killed a 20 year old heroin addict who held two teen age brothers hostage during a 30 hour siege.
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