I had to use pepper spray twice in 25 plus years. One of those times in was completely ineffective. My state only authorized tasers a couple of years ago. They put so many restrictions on its use you pretty much have to be in a deadly force situation where a gun could be justifiably used. It’s illegal in my state to tase someone even in a training situation with pretty severe penalties. You can’t volunteer to be tased. So I haven’t.
Wow. In a prison setting it is a daily thing. My son was/is on the “cell extraction team”. If someone refuses to leave their cell, they call for a cell extraction team, the members of which are all geared up to storm the cell and remove the offender while suffering zero injuries.
He’s never had an escape attempt though. He is trained at deadly force for those situations and can shoot from the tower and kill someone 100 yards away.
It would not surprise me if the price paid was one of the factors involved in deciding which passenger to bump involuntarily. Frequent flier status, too.
If you’re a giant spider, or a giant caterpillar, or a giant bird in the 1950s you will be called something like “It Challenged The World” or “It Conquered The World” despite the fact they’re usually killed by a bunch of stock footage of Air Force F-104’s dropping bombs on them to death.
Nowadays you gotta survive a nuke to actually be considered “World Threatening”.
I used to work for a hotel chain that had a loyalty program (similar to an airline frequent flyer club) that had various tiers of membership (blue, silver, gold). One of the privileges of Gold Membership was you were allowed to overbook us and bump other people out of their rooms. The Gold Members would often get very smug about it. Until the first time they got bumped by a Diamond Member.
That is a bad idea folks. Now, I am not a real doctor (nor do I play on on TV, altho i do in RPGs) but I know enough to tell you that being tazed can kill you if you have certain heart conditions- which you might not know about.
Under controlled conditions like under training it is much safer.
Has “actor being killed by a prop gun/knife” been mentioned?
Obviously happens in real life: see Alec Baldwin thread. But I can think offhand of ten shows it has happened on, and if I did a little Googling, I’ll bet I could come up with so many, that if there were that many in real like, there’d be a law that instead of “real” prop guns and knives, you had to use a stalk of celery.
Oh-- and it’s always an “accident” staged to cover a deliberate murder, of course. Not sure that has ever happened, but maybe during the 18th century.
Yeah, RC means the plot that always shows up on long-running mystery shows like Quincy, M.E. and Murder, She Wrote and Castle and oh so many others. Along with all the variants when it comes to weapon/method. Plot #74 in the Mystery Writers Handbook.
Back when stun guns became commercially available in the 1980s, a friend of mine was at a party and one of her friends decided to try a stun gun on herself to see if it worked (and in case you’re wondering if alcohol was involved, the answer was, of course, yes).
I want to say that this was an old Equalizer (Ed Woodward) ep., where some people are playing paintball, but a real bullet got into one of the marker and someone accidentally shoots and kills someone else. Which if you understand how a paintball marker works is impossible.