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Beautiful Ground Fighting Skills by Law Enforcement officer (Gracie Breakdown)

Big_Chief_Stove

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The officer shown in the video shows beautiful control, positioning and most importantly restraint. I feel in this situation there are a fair amount of officers that would've decided to shoot this individual, mostly because they're not skilled enough in grappling tactics IMO. The officer shown clearly has taken the responsibility on himself to become adept at ground fighting skills and it resulted in preserving his own life as well as the individual's. This is one GOOD cop, ladies and gents.

 
this belongs in the f12. but I also think it's probably old news.
 
Conor would have tapped faster.

That "criminal" has better ground game.

#criminalbless
 
We actually went over this in briefing. One of our use of force instructors is a purple belt who has done pretty well at the world's in the past.

It's nice to be incorporating more BJJ into our training.
 
If Ground and Pound is "beautiful grounding skills" then what the bad skills are? I do not even want to know.

From the start: suspect hands on the hood, spread his legs. No need for jiu-jitsu.

lawyers-and-police-officers-may-need-to-use-a-people-sear_16001035_800804132_0_0_14012481_500.jpg
 
If Ground and Pound is "beautiful grounding skills" then what the bad skills are? I do not even want to know.

From the start: suspect hands on the hood, spread his legs. No need for jiu-jitsu.

lawyers-and-police-officers-may-need-to-use-a-people-sear_16001035_800804132_0_0_14012481_500.jpg
Lol. It's not always picture perfect. The officer actually used little punches as a distraction. He could have gone full mark Kerr on the suspect but he didn't.
 
Lol. It's not always picture perfect. The officer actually used little punches as a distraction. He could have gone full mark Kerr on the suspect but he didn't.
Oh, yeah. He even got gun but he did not use it. We are all thankful for that. You can also hear spectators cheering him as he is pounding.

He did not use it as "distraction". He just knew nothing better than pounding and then trying to use taiser gun.

And all that he really needed to do is to pin that guy down for another minute. That's it.
 
Oh, yeah. He even got gun but he did not use it. We are all thankful for that. You can also hear spectators cheering him as he is pounding.

He did not use it as "distraction". He just knew nothing better than pounding and then trying to use taiser gun.

And all that he really needed to do is to pin that guy down for another minute. That's it.
Yup. He knows exactly when his backup is coming. He has a gps implanted in his brain and knew backup was coming in one minute. He just wanted to get some gnp in.
 
If Ground and Pound is "beautiful grounding skills" then what the bad skills are? I do not even want to know.

From the start: suspect hands on the hood, spread his legs. No need for jiu-jitsu.

lawyers-and-police-officers-may-need-to-use-a-people-sear_16001035_800804132_0_0_14012481_500.jpg
We don't live in a vacuum, BJJ very necessary.
 
What does the double yellow card mean? I'm dumb I guess, I have no idea.
 
If Ground and Pound is "beautiful grounding skills" then what the bad skills are? I do not even want to know.

From the start: suspect hands on the hood, spread his legs. No need for jiu-jitsu.

lawyers-and-police-officers-may-need-to-use-a-people-sear_16001035_800804132_0_0_14012481_500.jpg

Wrong, suspects hands should be behind his head with his fingers interlaced.
 
Wrong, suspects hands should be behind his head with his fingers interlaced.
It depends on the training the officer received. Some schools of thought think the hands behind the back with fingers held is a good form to do a terry frisk. It's not set in stone. It's also a lot of officer discretion.
 
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