A View on the
Second Amendment from a Texas Cop
Peter W. Wickham, Jr
AKA The Ol' Grey Ghost
pdjc@earthlink.net
I know a lot of you out there may think that from what you hear from Police
Chiefs from across this great country, that every man and woman who wears the
"Badge" is ready to set in place that utopian, totalitarian regime
that would strip everyone of their rights and their firearms--except for the
police and the military. Though this fear is well-placed because of the
effective propaganda machine of the liberal left, in actuality it is far from
the truth.
I was a police officer in the city of Belton, Texas from 1984 to 1991,
working my way up from a volunteer reserve police officer to acting-Sergeant and
shift supervisor. Along with my regular patrol duties, I was the department's
Firearms Instructor and Rangemaster, D.W.I. Investigator and Intoxilyzer
Operator, and an instructor at our department's Regional Reserve Police Academy
teaching courses in Firearms and the laws covering the use of deadly force, the
laws and procedures of making a D.W.I. case and arrest, Mechanics of Arrest,
Defensive Tactics, and Street Survival Techniques. In my short career, I was
involved in one shooting, seven near-shootings (situations where I would have
been authorized by law to use deadly force but where I used less-than-deadly
force to control the situation) and over three-hundred bouts of hand-to-hand
combat, dealing with subjects who just didn't want to be handcuffed to those who
were trying to kill me with their bare hands.
Before I became a police officer, I was already a law-abiding gunowner. I,
along with a lot of officers that came through our reserve police officer
program, didn't have to go and buy a sidearm to use when we were on duty because
we had already made the choice to own that weapon many years before we even
considered going into law enforcement as a profession. We believed in the Right
to Keep and Bear Arms before we became cops, while we were cops, and for most of
us who retired or went into other professions, after we were cops. I would even
go so far as to say that a large number of police officers gravitate toward
their profession through their interest in firearms (thrown in with an interest
in the oriental martial arts).
One incident in our small city (pop. 15,000) that comes to mind was with a
rather large apartment complex that the city engineers in their infinite wisdom
had given a different address for the two parts of it--though it was one
complex--so we just called it Sodom and Gomorrah. We had a particularly hot
summer that year, and we were having a problem with small race riots breaking
out all over the complex. The manager asked me what they could do to cut down on
the problems. My first suggestion was to install air conditioning so that
everyone would stay in their own apartment with their windows closed and watch
TV and stay out of each other's hair. She said they would look into that (and
they finally went through with it a few years later) but she then asked me if
they should ban firearms from the complex. I told her I considered this act
unconstitutional since they were a HUD approved and subsidized housing project
(this was many years before anyone outside of Arkansas had ever heard of Bill
Clinton) and it would be hard for her and her staff to enforce it as the police
were not going to search everyone's apartment for firearms (they hadn't even
been a problem until she mentioned it). She said she guessed I was right.
A few months later, we had an incident in this apartment complex where a
young man, under 18 years of age, was brandishing a .22 rifle and threatening to
shoot people (those of you who know a little about gun laws may already see what
is wrong with this picture). One man who was this youth's intended target fled
into his own apartment but before he could secure his front door the youth had
kicked it open. This man then grabbed his wife and kids and fled to a back
bedroom and shut that door. By the time this youth had kicked in that door, the
man was able to grab his 20 gauge shotgun he kept in his bedroom closet and
shoot the youth squarely in the chest at close range. Needless to say this
criminally inclined young man was dead in a matter of seconds. The district
attorney's office decided not to file any charges against the man with the
shotgun as they considered this a justifiable homicide. Now if that apartment
manager had gone through with her plan to disarm all the tenants of this
apartment complex, that man and his family may not be alive today.
I read somewhere once that a city (if I remembered the name I still wouldn't
tell you to avoid embarrassing the residents there) was having a Great Night
Out--that crime prevention program where everyone turns on their front porch
lights and gets to know their neighbors so as to create an atmosphere not
conducive to crime. Well, two men in this city (if I remember right, they were
father and adult son) were sitting on their front porch passing out free iced
tea to all who came by but they also had strapped to their belts holstered
handguns. When asked by the reporter who was covering the event why they were
armed, the older man answered, "The greatest deterrent to crime is an
armed citizenry." When the reporter brought this to the attention of
the local Chief of Police, he said something to the effect that was the last
thing they needed was a group of armed vigilantes roving the streets--and he
said he would send out officers immediately to investigate these two men, or in
other words, intimidate them into compliance with the Chief's wishes. I never
heard anything about what happened afterwards.
But no truer words have ever been spoken. It is estimated that between 1 to 2
million times a year, armed citizens stop crime right in its track. And you
won't find the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) or Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) posting these figures anywhere. Many times I have come
across victims who could have saved themselves and countless others if they had
just been armed, but these are law-abiding citizens, and we have some strange
laws that tell these people they have to be unarmed when going out in the public
arena. "The greatest deterrent to crime is an armed citizenry." I
believed this then, I believe this today, and I know a lot of my fellow brothers
and sisters that wear the "Badge" today believe this, as well.
Peter W. Wickham, Jr
AKA The Ol' Grey Ghost
pdjc@earthlink.net