LS Tractor Owner
Super Member
- Joined
- May 1, 2017
- Messages
- 7,565
- Location
- Edgewood, NM
- Tractor
- LS XG3025 TLB, Previously MT125 TLB, Craftsman GTS6500
I have seen / treated many patients shot with a .22, most did't make it if they were too far from the hospital. 22's go in and ricochet all over the place.
The last one that I transported was a lowlife that was stealing a motorcycle. The owners saw him and started pursuing him in a car. The owners firing a .22 at him while high speed down a city street. The guy stopped in a hospital parking lot, dropped the bike, and tried running towards the ER.
We had just cleared the ER and were about 4 blocks from the parking lot, so got there really quick. There was no blood anywhere, but he was "going out". We scooped him up and drove maybe the 1000' to the ER.
He was shot high in the left butt cheek... the entrance hole looked more like a pimple. When the initial X-rays were done, the bullet was up under his right collar bone..... zig-zagged all the way there. He died about 15 minutes later.
A .22 isn't going to stop someone in their tracks, but it will cause some damage, especially in the torso.
The last one that I transported was a lowlife that was stealing a motorcycle. The owners saw him and started pursuing him in a car. The owners firing a .22 at him while high speed down a city street. The guy stopped in a hospital parking lot, dropped the bike, and tried running towards the ER.
We had just cleared the ER and were about 4 blocks from the parking lot, so got there really quick. There was no blood anywhere, but he was "going out". We scooped him up and drove maybe the 1000' to the ER.
He was shot high in the left butt cheek... the entrance hole looked more like a pimple. When the initial X-rays were done, the bullet was up under his right collar bone..... zig-zagged all the way there. He died about 15 minutes later.
A .22 isn't going to stop someone in their tracks, but it will cause some damage, especially in the torso.