I really wish this thread would die since it is ages old but I feel this needs to be addressed. You claim you have advice from a policeman that "showing it if something occors is way enough to scare someone off" and I think if you ttruly had gotten advice from any law enforcement officer he/she would have told you something very different. If you carry a gun and draw that gun on someone when you do you should have the intent of killing that person and nothing else. I know this is a very harsh thing to say and this is exactly the reason I don't have/carry a gun but flashing a weapon around without the force behind it is a great way to get yourself killed.
Sorry JIP but I just had to jump in on this one and add to it. Like you, I too wish this thread would die.
I've been a law enforcement officer for 26 years and I can tell you that no self respecting knowledgeable LEO would ever tell anyone to carry a gun and flash it around. While most officers support the 2nd amendment we also support knowledge, training, experience and conviction for any citizen that can and does legally carry a firearm.
First, if you are not carrying it legally you are now a criminal yourself. Plus, if you have no legal right to carry the weapon, if you are confronted by an officer, you very well could get hurt or killed. Anytime an incident happens with deadly force, officers are trained to take out the most lethal force first. If you are the one with the gun, you are the most lethal force. We had an incident in my area a few years ago where a young man decided to play good guy after his sisters parked vehicle had been struck by a hit and run driver. Grabbed a shotgun and took off after the vehicle. Citizens called in the reckless driving and the mother called in the incident. The officers located the young man and stopped him. They ordered him from the vehicle as the shotgun was sitting in plain view in the car next to the young man. For what ever reason he decided to grab hold of the shotgun. He was shot by the offices for his actions. He did happen to live.
In my state we have a carry concealed law that allows those that are trained and pass some tests to carry a handgun concealed with a permit. I have no problem with that. To date, we have not had an incident because of it. We will at some point I am sure. There are a couple of things to remember if you happen to be a citizen that can legally carry a concealed weapon.
First, if you choose to carry that weapon you choose to be responsible for all of you actions involving that weapon. You must know the law and when deadly force is legal. Deadly force is legal to protect your life or the life of another. It is not legal to use deadly force to protect personal property. If you do, you are subject to being charged with the appropriate charge for the result of your use of deadly force. That could be some form of aggravated assault charge all the way up to some form of homicide charge.
Secondly, if you choose to carry a handgun you better damn well be prepared to use that weapon if necessary, without hesitation. You hesitate and you are dead. If you think that "flashing" that gun around will do any good you are just begging to get yourself killed. I've worked more than one killing where someone thought that showing a gun would solve the problem. Most of those dead citizens were killed with their own gun that were taken away from them.
If you have never dealt with the kinds of people that can commit crimes of violence you have no clue to the way they think or will act. You look at the world from your rosy little perspective right up to the point they kill you grave yard dead. I have enough to do with out people going out with their rose colored glasses on volunteering to get hurt or killed because they don't know any better or just plain lack common sense.
Finally, if you choose to legally carry a handgun, if you get into a situation and LEO's show up, you do everything the LEO tells you, exactly the way they tell you, exactly when they tell you unless you want to become just another accident. When we show up at a scene nobody gives us a program that lists the players. You are all bad guys until we get things under control and can sort things out. Then things change. It's not that we don't know that there are good guys and bad guys, it's just that we have to sort it out for ourselves and not take someone else's word for it.
If you happen to be that law abiding citizen that is legally carrying that handgun and you happen to have to use it in some fashion, when we arrive, put the gun down and step away from the weapon. If you in your excitement happen to move the muzzle of that weapon in my direction or the direction of one of my fellow officers, you have now placed me or one of them at risk and I will pull the trigger without hesitation. I know, trust me on that one.
And for the record, we are not taught to shoot to kill, we are taught to shoot to stop. The best place to stop someone that has a weapon is to shoot for center mass. Harder to miss them that way. Center mass is the center of the chest area. Unfortunately that is the same area that holds a lot of vital organs.
If you don't think that in the heat of a gun fight that your aim is a little less accurate than when you are shooting at a paper target, well come on out to our range. I will gladly take you down to our simulator room and give you a weapon with blanks. While you are shooting at the threats that pop up at you I will be adding that nervous factor of a real gun fight, cause I will be shooting you with a paint ball gun and I will be aiming right at your crotch. One shot with a paint ball there and you will have a healthy respect for that non-lethal weapon folks like to shoot at each other in their make believe battles. Believe me, after that the pucker factor really sets in fast and your hands will shake like you never thought they would.