This past Friday, 20/20's "When Life Changes in an Instant" shared an office exit plan and drill when confronted by a gunman. John Bruner, a 20-year law-enforcement veteran who is the former Chief County Detective with the Greene County (Pa.) District Attorney's Office, shares how to survive an aggressor in an office setting and how muscle memory can enable you to react to save your life.
Office Video:
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/run-hide-fight-11-tips-survive-shooting/story?id=18990573
Full Show: (Learn how to protect yourself and your family in many dangerous situations)
http://abc.go.com/watch/2020/SH559026/VDKA0_l1ueyrqo/2020-426-life-changes-in-an-instant
Prepare |
That often causes tunnel vision and auditory exclusion -- impaired hearing due to the fight-or-flight state.
"But what kicks in is your ventral striatum," Bruner went on. "That's where your muscle memory is stored. So if you train for these situations, and you train properly, you will strengthen that muscle memory."
Bruner advocates widespread frequent drills akin to the frequent fire drills in the 1970s and bomb shelter drills in the 1950s.
"We have to practice this every eight months or so, especially with businesses with high turnover," Bruner said. "You've got to get a plan together."
Run -- and Take Others With You |
Some people's first instinct may be to freeze and hide, but if possible, you should fight it and get yourself and others out, Bruner said.
"If you know the shooter is pretty far away," Bruner said, "encourage people, Hey, join us, we have a shooter down the hall. Let's exit over here."
If there's an elderly person who may be disoriented, grab him or her if he or she is within arm's length, Bruner added.
"If you know the shooter is pretty far away," Bruner said, "encourage people, Hey, join us, we have a shooter down the hall. Let's exit over here."
If there's an elderly person who may be disoriented, grab him or her if he or she is within arm's length, Bruner added.
Leave the Cellphone |
Can't Run? Hide |
Then do all you can to prevent the shooter from entering the room and causing injury, Bruner said. Lock the door and use a doorstop if there is one. Put a chair, a sofa, and even a desk in front of the door. Turn the lights off.
The more weight and objects, the greater the distraction to the shooter trying to get in. This not only makes it harder for him to shoot at you, Bruner said, it lets time be your ally.
"Two or three minutes in an active shooter [situation] is a lot of time," Bruner said. "[It] allows our police to come in and do their job."
Silence Your Cellphone |
Why the Landline? |
Fight |
Scissors, hot coffee, the coffee carafe, other glass objects from an office pantry, for example. Fire extinguishers, either engaged or as a weapon to inflict blunt force trauma, are good.
"Maybe you keep a pen on you. You back it with your thumb so you can really make it an effective tool to help save your life," Bruner said.
Aim High |
If you can't do that, aim for the eyes, face, shoulder and neck, Bruner said.
Fight as a Group |
11.
"The first five seconds of an active shooter incident [are] paramount," Bruner said. Don't freeze in disbelief. "React immediately."Whatever You Do, Do Something |
"The game has changed," Bruner said. "This country is experiencing a lot of traumatic incidents, as we well know, so you have to be prepared."
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