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เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 5 ม.ค. 2020
Innovation in Firearms Training w/ Matt Little - 2021 ILEETA Conference
Innovation in Firearms Training w/ Matt Little - 2021 ILEETA Conference
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This excerpt from an interview recorded at the 2021 ILEETA Conference features Matt Little, USPSA & IDPA Master Class Shooter. Matt's take on imitation, innovation, and experimentation will #ChangeTheStandard of firearms training for law enforcement.
To reach your full potential as a shooter, you need to seek out training outside of your wheelhouse and understand the science of how to become an expert. Matt put it perfectly when he said “number of rounds fired is no guarantee of skill” - more is not always better.
Watch the FULL EPISODE here ►► th-cam.com/video/Z_Zvfm3Y_vI/w-d-xo.html
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About Matt Little:
Matt Little is a US Army Special Forces combat veteran and a retired Chicago Police Department SWAT leader. He is a lifelong martial artist and a USPSA & IDPA Master Class Shooter. Matt’s passion for innovating his own training experience led him to open Greybeard Actual, where he uses his decades of operational, competitive, and instructional experience to provide advanced training in firearms, tactics, and combatives.
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Subscribe to “ILET Network”: th-cam.com/users/ILETNetwork
Up next ►► th-cam.com/video/Z_Zvfm3Y_vI/w-d-xo.html
This excerpt from an interview recorded at the 2021 ILEETA Conference features Matt Little, USPSA & IDPA Master Class Shooter. Matt's take on imitation, innovation, and experimentation will #ChangeTheStandard of firearms training for law enforcement.
To reach your full potential as a shooter, you need to seek out training outside of your wheelhouse and understand the science of how to become an expert. Matt put it perfectly when he said “number of rounds fired is no guarantee of skill” - more is not always better.
Watch the FULL EPISODE here ►► th-cam.com/video/Z_Zvfm3Y_vI/w-d-xo.html
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
About Matt Little:
Matt Little is a US Army Special Forces combat veteran and a retired Chicago Police Department SWAT leader. He is a lifelong martial artist and a USPSA & IDPA Master Class Shooter. Matt’s passion for innovating his own training experience led him to open Greybeard Actual, where he uses his decades of operational, competitive, and instructional experience to provide advanced training in firearms, tactics, and combatives.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Check out our Podcast Network:
►► podcast.ilet.network
or
Go directly to The Tactical Breakdown Podcast:
►► podcast.ilet.network/show/tactical-breakdown/
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow ILET:
Website: ilet.network/
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/ilet-network/
Facebook: ILETnetwork
Twitter: iletnetwork
Instagram: iletnetwork
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I find that IDPA is a great way to wring out your EDC, tells you what works and what doesn't
lol cost the agency? they steal from the citizens...all pigs trained liars and thieves.
All qualified immunity should be removed and legal settlements should come out of pension funds.
victimless crimes...blue line gang redcoats...all wealth to the crown, gawd save the qween
Looking good brother. ❤
Thirty years as a police officer and thirteen as FTO Sergeant. Keep in mind that your trainee may be your boss. I 've seen it happen time and time again and they remember how you treated them and will treat you accordingly.
Great advice, useful to so many skill based activities.
They are born PERFECT😁
Thank you! Superb! Have never seen that retention technique before.
ABLE training is TRASH. It is a death by power point with forced group exercises (way too often) to walk through the basics of a moral compass thinking. It is elementary. It is what should be weeded out in an interview process. Not for active LEOs. ABLE Training is a check the box course. It is not an intervention training. I’m sorry but if you’re curious about what someone will do to intervene, that should be a hands on training. Not some overpaid course that is forced and given through a PowerPoint. It was PAINFUL and irrelevant Training when I attended it last year. 👎🏼 to ABLE Training.
I am humbly honored to be a Founding Member of ILET! The opportunity to make others better through Training and Education with ILET is indeed a great and special privilege.
Excellent background, Andy! Outstanding!
👍🤝
How do they confuse this as a hostage situation? I’m sorry but hearing that got me heated. Thank you guys for your input.
Awesome 👍 ILet you Rock
Gratings from Portugal
Adam, I look forward to working with you and ILET more in the future. Good luck with the MRS, we all face that battle my friend.
ILET is going to have a global impact in law enforcement training. With so many icons in the training world part of the process the future for ILET looks bright. Very exciting times. #ChangeTheStandard
Outstanding and excellent historical video on ILET. 👍👍
Thank you IRT, great discussion. It's a sad state of affairs. No words...
Great discussion. Guys you were on point with your comments. My deepest condolence to the victims and families. Based on your comments , the findings, the reports and the actual events this represent lack of training ,leadership, structure etc. Thank you for the great information discussed. Alex Sostre - Puerto Rico 🇵🇷
Adam- I would like to receive more information about trainings and from the member of the panel. Here in Puerto Rico, government does not place this topic as a priority.
Disgusted by these cops! INSANITY! We received about 15 minutes simunition training during a 5 week course to become an SSO If we heard rounds being fired or people shouting, we moved nearly as fast as possible, running towards the shooter's position, barely scanning on the way! If we saw blood, bodies, bullet casings, then we would slow it down a little searching rooms and applying TQs on the way forward, but always moving forward. We had handguns against rifles, vests that were not rated for rifle caliber, we knew the risks! We realized that we HAD to go! It was what we were being paid for, even when you are being shot at! We were the only chance that kids live's could be saved. Every officer that was at the school and heard shots should be let go to another profession.
You should do another video reviewing the bodycam footage. Arredondo deliberately goes into the school without his radio but is on the phone the whole time. His officers relay what dispatch tells them (re: victims in classroom) but then he has to relay that information to someone on the phone. Who was on the phone?
Probably with the company that will get the bullet proof door/window, security fob and fencing contract on all schools now. Because nobody is that that much of a keystone cop.
Thanks Adam , this is indepth and rich knowledge. Very much needed.
The best seminar and training in years. Luv it. Thanks Adam
Great panel discussion. Certainly some changes and planning needed to make improvements in response and approach to this type of incident.
I agree with Lon, right amount of force to avoid more force later.
Thank you so much. Found this fact based and honestly presented. Hope you and the group will come back with another video.
Ignoring the hard questions 48:00
This is a great round table. Everyone had a different background and each offered excellent comments from their field. Do not be put off by the 2.5 hour lenght. I moves very quickly with a lot of fabulous insights being offered.
Dr. Taylor makes an excellent point about "De-escalation" efforts driving encounters with perpetrators to lethality. Think about it for a moment. If the Perp thinks you're hesitant to use lethal force then (s)he (99% HE) will, in effect, see just how far they can push things. But if he is convinced, AT THE OUTSET, that dicking around will GET HIM KILLED or permanently disabled, then he is more likely to adjust his behavior accordingly. We see this demonstrated on a daily basis in Los Angeles, San Francisco and other West Coast cities where "The Suits" in the 'justice' system have chosen to, essentially, IGNORE criminal activity such as grand larceny if the property value is less than some arbitrary threshold of approximately $1000. So, instead of a lone shoplifter grabbing an item or two, ENTIRE HERDS of thieves pull up in a motorcade and strip the shelves bare of merchandise because they KNOW they will not be molested. What is most perplexing about this is the tendency of Federal law enforcement to go in the EXTREME opposite direction; sending a full platoon of armed and armored ninja-styled combatants in armored vehicles and helicopters in the wee hours of the morning to take down a 70-year-old man who has never committed a violent act in his entire life. It is BEYOND MADDENING.
Wright was in the driver seat of his vehicle, one officer struggling with him through the drivers door and another officer through the passenger door. Potter was standing outside the drivers door separated by the other officer. She was not in danger and therefore her stress level should not have played a role. For a trained officer, in a non threatening situation, to mistake her handgun for her taser and take a citizens life while that citizen is posing no lethal threat, and while being held by two other officers is CRIMINAL! The way this case was tried may prove to the contrary but citizens are fed-up with being shot by the police for traffic stops.
I disagree with the psychologist. You don't mistake your baby for a cushion and drop him on the floor, no matter what distractions there are. On the other hand doing an air gear change won't kill anyone, so it won't get high priority, even with training. So, the parallel is a poor one.
On the stand Potter indicated that she did not know the pistol was heavier than the taser. She replied, "if you say so!" Should she have known for sure! Not learning the difference seems reckless to me.
According to the lawyer's definition, killing somebody while driving drunk is not criminal negligence, it is a civil matter! Just apply his test!
No, you somehow misunderstood the lawyers definition, which is a correct and I thought very clearly rendered explanation. It is indeed not mere negligence that creates criminal liability. It is criminal RECKLESSNESS, a higher degree of negligence that has criminal liability attendant to it. Minnesota calls it "culpable negligence" The Minnesota Supreme Court has defined culpable negligence in a clear phrasing. Culpable negligence is “gross negligence coupled with the element of recklessness. It is intentional conduct which the actor may not intend to be harmful but which an ordinary and reasonably prudent man would recognize as involving a strong probability of injury to others.” State v. Beilke, 127 N.W.2d 516, 521 (Minn. 1964) Key word there: intentional. One has to make the intentional decision to drive drunk and so absolutely is culpable negligence. The phrasing he gave is intended to make it clear there is a difference between the two throughout the United States and to identify the operating element that separates the two: recklessness. It requires one to consciously know something is extremely dangerous to oneself and others, in your example driving a motor vehicle while intoxicated. You then have to realize you are doing it and consciously choose to ignore the risk and do it anyway. The prosecution conceded that they did not intend to argue that Kim Potter realized she had drawn her firearm instead of her taser. The judge then failed to clearly define the elements of the law to the lay jury, then issued inadequate jury instructions that could of rectified that error. The jury, it has been revealed from the interview of that juror (provided they were truthful in that interview) deliberated elements which were not relative to finding whether or not the defendant's conduct was culpable negligence. Since she believed she had drawn her taser, her conduct was in line with using that and yelling out "taser taser taser" followed by "Holy shit I shot him" leaves little doubt she believed she was holding her taser when she discharged her firearm. A specifically non-lethal weapon. Because it requires the recognition of risk and deliberately ignoring it, the weight difference of the two is not an element at play here and given the undisputed facts of the case it was inappropriate for the jury to consider it in their deliberations. In this case, she HAS to know, not SHOULD have known, it was her firearm for it to be culpable negligence under the Minnesota statute (and every other state) because the taser is non-lethal and is deployed (from a holster) and operated in exactly the same way as her firearm (You pull the trigger).
drunk driving is a deliberately reckless act. Someone who drives drunk has consciously disregarded an unjustified risk to other drivers.
wonder if we should make it a thing that the holster for the taser not be the same function as the pistol. safariland for pistol and blackhawk for taser, i know serpas are the devil of nds but blackhawk automatically engages the safety lever on a taser when holstered and you need it off safe before it can fire. heck I tried to holster the cew engaged and i couldnt fight the holster making it safe. the motor skills for the safariland would be so drastically differebt if it were a leg moubted weak sided draw. There was just another incident recebtly in nevada but that officer missed with the pistol thankfully
Great panel and discussion. Thanks fellas
Awesome episode
Thank you for sharing!
Great information!
An excellent ILET SUMMIT mental health and awareness for law enforcement. Kudos to the organisers for such an excellent work !
A note that timestamps with critical questions would really help the viewer. 1:45:00. Would the internet as a resource help with this?
Great discussion guys! It is a shame that this information is not more readily available!!!
Amazing information provided in this Podcast. Thanks and keep up the good work.
Great!
Did you guys know that on the Ambulances in Germany, there's a doctor on board in a mobile operating room. Also, my training in the US Army as a 91B and 91C3F was never forgotten and I thank God for my training because, I've used in many times in Law Enforcement since I retired in 8/1985.
USMC trained and qualified at 800 to 1000 meters Marine Corp Base Camp Pendleton Ca.
You should always train for the unexpected.
Great infomation that can be used if faced in these types of Active Shooter Threat.