Academy graduates reunite
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Andrew Edwards
They came, they saw, they shot back.
They were more than 50 graduates of the Laguna Beach Police
Department’s Citizen’s Academy who reunited Saturday to get a taste
of two of the grittier aspects of police training. After a quick
lunch at the Golden West College Police Academy in Huntington Beach,
the guests had a chance to train for life or death situations with
the academy’s firearms simulator and duke it out with police in a
mock baton fight.
The simulator is an $80,000 machine that lets police cadets learn
when to shoot and when to hold their fire. While a training officer
mans a computer that plays recorded scenarios, two cadets watch the
action unfold on a large screen in front of them. The cadets each
carry an automatic pistol, a Glock and a Beretta that are rigged to a
gas device that causes the weapon to recoil when the trigger is
pulled. Instead of bullets, the automatics fire a laser at the screen
and the computer tells the trainer if the cadets missed, wounded or
killed their target. The trainer tells the cadets if they made a
sound decision or if they acted outside of police guidelines.
“I use this on recruits to see what their thought process is,”
Officer Bob Van Gorder said.
Van Gorder handled the computer while visitors took turns on the
simulator. The scenarios ran to the hectic extremes of life on the
streets. High speed chases, knife wielding maniacs, hostage
situations and a nut with an AK-47 were the order of the day.
On his turn, Brian Mellen faced off against the
Kalashnikov-wielding villain. He had to decide what to do when a man,
who was described in a voice-over as a suspicious person who was seen
staring at a business, burst out of his car and fired a burst at
Mellen and his partner. The two fired back, and the actor playing the
criminal went down on the screen, only to whip a out a pistol and
fire off a few more rounds.
“It’s almost like playing a game,” Mellen said, “but when you
think about that, it’s not a game ... it’s very sobering.”
Whereas the firearms simulator was a high-tech exercise that
required people to use their brains as much as their killer instinct,
the baton training was a more physical, visceral activity. The object
was to use a padded baton to fend off two attackers for a full
minute.
When Mary Lawson took her try at the event, she challenged reserve
officer Ben Teshener and police volunteer Ross Fallah. Her
adversaries wore padded helmets and carried padded shields for their
protection. The three were a flurry of blows and counter-blows as
Lawson swung with all her might against Teshener and Fallah, and the
three kept the intensity on full blast until time was up.
“The adrenaline was flowing, I was trying to figure out a way to
get away and at the same time defend,” she said.
The event was open to Citizen Academy graduates and their
families. The police department hosts two academy classes per year
and the next session is scheduled to begin in September.
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