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Richard Fairburn

Law Enforcement Firearms

Dick Fairburn has more than 40 years of law enforcement experience in both Illinois and Wyoming, working patrol, investigations and administrative assignments. Dick also served as the section chief of a major academy’s Firearms Training Unit and critical incident training program. He has a B.S. in Law Enforcement Administration from Western Illinois University and was the Valedictorian of his recruit class at the Illinois State Police Academy. He has published more than 300 feature articles and two books: “Police Rifles” and “Building a Better Gunfighter.” Dick is currently serving as the public safety director in a Central Illinois community, overseeing the police and fire departments, as well as the 911 center.

LATEST ARTICLES
The FSM4 was the fastest handling AR I’ve ever used and I wrung it out from all available firing positions over the course of two long days of turning ammo into brass
Whether hunting “bad guys” or big game, a small, spotting scope can be nearly as handy as your rifle
If rioting involves businesses being looted and burned, our brothers and sisters in the big red trucks will be summoned — and any FD or EMS response in the hot zone will require a dedicated police presence to protect the responders
Watching ‘outdoor’ channels, I marveled at the percentage of DRT shots on the video hunts
Working street cops, supervisors, and FTOs who transition new officers from the academy to the street are the real experts in the assessment and training of new cops
These units are decidedly low resolution, about 32,000 pixels (.032 Megapixels), but the image is useful and amazingly accurate
When you’re fighting at bad-breath distance, simply pointing and pulling the trigger stands a fair chance of success, but when you get out to seven yards or further, marksmanship training begins to pay off
Every use-of-force incident must be examined as a unique event — no two are alike — but we may be able to apply a few general concepts in our ‘after-action’ analysis
You can certainly pay less for an AR carbine, but they will probably be substantially heavier