I’ve actually seen this taught if you are carrying a sub-compact and the grip situation does not allow for a “normal” grip. Not having huge hands myself I can still make the standard grip work, but I had to modify my normal grip a bit as my weak side thumb would occasionally rub on the slide, causing a failure to chamber the next round. Practice, practice, practice, as always.
I see this a bit differently: he was getting tired holding the gun up waiting for the police so he moved to a more comfortable grip.
Think about the time element: the good guy had the bad guy under the gun when the news crew was driving by. He had already been there for some time, because the police were showing up just a minute or so after the camera crew was set up (1-2 minutes, tops). So that’s 8-10 minutes holding the bad guy at bay. His arms were tired by then.
I think the good guy moved his left hand under his right wrist to support the weight of the gun (which is closer to his body than normal) while waiting for the LEOs to arrive. Even a 22oz mouse gun (gun + ammo) will start to feel heavy after a few minutes.
Try holding a small gun at a target for 8-10 minutes and see how your grip changes.
The bigger problem was that he was not defending himself…he was playing cop. He saw a guy on the sidewalk who might or might not have broken into the church. Then when the guy ran, he went after him.
Generally speaking, that doesn’t usually articulate into a reasonable fear of death or serious physical injury justifying lethal force.
April 8th, 2016 at 9:32 am
Horrible grip – and self defense with a handgun still worked.
April 8th, 2016 at 12:00 pm
I’ve actually seen this taught if you are carrying a sub-compact and the grip situation does not allow for a “normal” grip. Not having huge hands myself I can still make the standard grip work, but I had to modify my normal grip a bit as my weak side thumb would occasionally rub on the slide, causing a failure to chamber the next round. Practice, practice, practice, as always.
April 8th, 2016 at 2:38 pm
I see this a bit differently: he was getting tired holding the gun up waiting for the police so he moved to a more comfortable grip.
Think about the time element: the good guy had the bad guy under the gun when the news crew was driving by. He had already been there for some time, because the police were showing up just a minute or so after the camera crew was set up (1-2 minutes, tops). So that’s 8-10 minutes holding the bad guy at bay. His arms were tired by then.
I think the good guy moved his left hand under his right wrist to support the weight of the gun (which is closer to his body than normal) while waiting for the LEOs to arrive. Even a 22oz mouse gun (gun + ammo) will start to feel heavy after a few minutes.
Try holding a small gun at a target for 8-10 minutes and see how your grip changes.
Anywho…glad he didn’t get hurt.
April 9th, 2016 at 10:56 pm
The bigger problem was that he was not defending himself…he was playing cop. He saw a guy on the sidewalk who might or might not have broken into the church. Then when the guy ran, he went after him.
Generally speaking, that doesn’t usually articulate into a reasonable fear of death or serious physical injury justifying lethal force.