Tactics, Techniques and Procedures are constantly improving in the realm of small unit emergency response. In the interest of improving TZ Critical Incident Response TZRD has conducted a After Action Review (AAR) of the Critical Incident Response(CIR)conducted by Law Enforcement first responders. This intelligence product was compiled with information drawn from multiple souces including the Regional Organized Crime Information Center's "Special Research Report:War on Cops."
From the ROCIC report -
"On Sunday, July 17, only ten days after the Dallas
shootings, the 911 call came into Baton Rouge P.D.
dispatch, a frantic message about “a dude with a
rifle” loitering around the B-Quik convenience
store. The site was less than a mile southeast of
police headquarters on Airline Highway. Local cops
frequented the car wash, the convenience store, and
gas station on a regular basis. The buildings were
flanked on one side by a fitness center and on the
other by a beauty supply store.
The subject of the call, wearing a ski mask and
body armor, parked his Chevy Malibu rental car
near the beauty supply store and strode over to a
parked police car at the adjacent convenience store.
Looking for officers, Long parked his car at a beauty supply
store just before 9:00 am.
He approached a parked
patrol car at the convenience
store, only to find it empty.
Long returned to his car and
drove it behind the fitness
expo before making his way
back to the beauty supply
store.
He shot two police officers, leaving one dead and the other crawling toward the back of the store.
A third officer took cover behind a dumpster. He tried to rescue the wounded officer but he was killed by the shooter.
Long jumped a wall and ran past the convenience store and car wash.
Long wounded two deputies,
one in his patrol car. A SWAT
team member shot and killed
him out from more than 100
yards away.
Timeline of Events
Police Ambush
9600 Block of Airline Hwy.
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Sun., July 17, 2016
Shooter:
Gavin E. Long
(killed by police)
Casualties:
3 officers killed,
3 wounded
Regional Organized Crime Information Center
Special Research Report - War on Cops
He brandished a semi-automatic bullpup-style rifle,
carried a Stag Arms M4 variant rifle, plus a 9mm
handgun. The patrol unit was empty. The rifleman
spotted another patrol car at the car wash. He drove
over and parked his car behind the fitness center,
but by the time he walked to the unit, the officer
had left.
The gunman began stalking the vicinity
and other patrol units began arriving, responding to
911 calls, including units from the East Baton Rouge
Parish Sheriff ’s Office. The gunman was named
Gavin Long. Turning the front corner of the beauty
supply store, Long spotted his first targets: Baton
Rouge Police Officers Matthew Gerald and Montrell
Jackson.
Without hesitation, the assassin shot both
men with his IWI Tavor SAR 5.56mm rifle, leaving
one dead and the second crawling toward the back
of store.
A sheriff ’s deputy, Brad Garafola, taking cover
behind a dumpster at the store with his gun drawn,
tried to rescue his wounded fellow officer only to
run face-to-face into the shooter. The shooter took
aim, killing the deputy in a hail of gunfire. The
deputy went down shooting.
Long then noticed the wounded city police officer
on the ground and with vicious brutality fired two
close-range shots.
Two and a half minutes after the initial 911 call,
police radio traffic indicated that they did not
know where the shooter was located. Three and a
half minutes after that, police indicated they had
located the shooter. Repeatedly, urgent calls went
out for a SWAT BearCat armored personnel carrier
to respond.
With three officers down, another city police officer
caught Long’s attention as he rounded his way back
behind the beauty supply store. Long stopped,
turned and shot, wounding the officer before
heading around back, jumping a wall, and running
past the convenience store and the car wash.
There, Sheriff ’s Deputy Nicholas Tullier, 41, had
returned to his police car after getting the license
plate from Long’s rental vehicle.
Long fired directly into the car, hitting Tullier in the
head and stomach, walking ever closer as he pulled
the trigger, before exchanging gunfire with Deputy
Bruce Simmons, who went down with a shot to the
shoulder.
Before Long could go any further, a shot rang out
from more than 100 yards away and killed him,
ending the killing spree. He had been felled by a
SWAT team member. It was a textbook maneuver
by the SWAT team and “a helluva shot,” said Baton
Rouge Police Chief Carl Dabadie Jr."
Public intelligence
“
Before Long could go any further, a shot rang out
from more than 100 yards away and killed him,
ending the killing spree.
”
TZRD works with all TZ Divisions to improve TTP's and recognizes the ultimate sacrifice of the law enforcement officers who were killed during this response while protecting our communities and safeguarding innocent lives.
Go Teame!
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