The Cheney Incident: Post Shooting Procedures

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Crossposted from another list I get . . .

From Alan Korwin:

Re: Post Shooting Procedures

Special note to my customers, friends and fans --

The following rules generally apply after a shooting incident (accidental
or self-defense), whether you are the Vice President of the United States
or not. Thanks to my friend Dr. Bruce Eimer, Ph.D., a clinical and forensic psychologist, for reminding me of these important basics, and providing facts. For some mysterious reason, little of this has come out in news reports.

1. All shooting incidents are traumatic for the good guys, especially when
innocent people have been hurt.

2. Post-shooting trauma is REAL and every good person involved in a
shooting incident gets it. Sleeplessness, flashbacks, disorientation,
remorse, malaise and other post-trauma symptoms are routine, expected and must be dealt with.

3. You have no legal obligation to contact or talk to the press, and
defense attorneys advise against doing so.

4. A person is least capable of making a coherent and consistent statement, with good word choices and chronological accuracy, immediately after a shooting incident, even though the urge to talk is typically great, and everyone around you will encourage it.

5. Knowing this, the police have adopted good standard procedures you can use as a guide. Remove yourself from all public contact, and go on
"administrative leave" (with pay), until an official statement can be
released in writing, in cooperation with a team of lawyers, within two weeks.

6. No statement of any kind should be made until conferring with attorneys.

7. You are advised against talking with police unless your lawyer is present.

8. The first concern must be for an injured party. Timely reporting to law
enforcement authorities is also essential, and it would be improper for
police to leak this to the press (both rules were observed in the Cheney
incident).

9. Allow yourself time to appropriately psychologically process your
post-shooting psychological trauma, and debrief this critical incident for
24 to 48 hours. Only then should you consider making a statement to the
press, the authorities, or anyone. Expressing sadness, contrition and
assuming FULL responsibility for the accident (as Cheney did in this case) is appropriate.

10. Do everything you can to avoid such situations.


Alan (with a lot of help from Bruce).


Contact:
Alan Korwin
BLOOMFIELD PRESS
"We publish the gun laws."
4718 E. Cactus #440
Phoenix, AZ 85032
602-996-4020 Phone
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<http://www.gunlaws.com>http://www.gunlaws.com
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Call, write, fax or click for a free full-color catalog.


To reach Dr. Eimer --
<http://www.PersonalDefenseSolutions.net>http://www.PersonalDefenseSolutions.net
 
Reporters have gotten lazy. They used to go out and GET the story. Now they feel that there is some constitutional right to be notified of the "news".
 
Optimistic Paranoid said:
Crossposted from another list I get . . .

From Alan Korwin:

Re: Post Shooting Procedures

Special note to my customers, friends and fans --

The following rules generally apply after a shooting incident (accidental
or self-defense), whether you are the Vice President of the United States
or not. Thanks to my friend Dr. Bruce Eimer, Ph.D., a clinical and forensic psychologist, for reminding me of these important basics, and providing facts. For some mysterious reason, little of this has come out in news reports.
We went over a paraphrase of this very list at our SAS meeting this past Saturday. Definitely food for thought!
 
JonJ said:
Reporters have gotten lazy. They used to go out and GET the story. Now they feel that there is some constitutional right to be notified of the "news".
Too much news is made up by the media. In this case, the media didn't have a story from the mouth of Cheney; so, it chose to pursue the path of the VP being in hiding. Either way, the media had something to sensationalize on, and, more importantly, something to justify their worth to advertisers. News reporting is a business in hot pursuit of advertising dollars; they don't really care about getting accurate information to the public.
 
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