Some Fla. Officers Get New Semi-Automatic Rifles
Tampa Tribune (Florida)
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - The bad guys have assault weapons, so why shouldn't police have at semiautomatic rifles?
That was the rationale used by the Fraternal Order of Police when the
union asked St. Petersburg Police Chief Chuck Harmon to allow his
officers to carry the Colt AR-15 carbine.
Harmon approved the request last year, but there were conditions: Any
officer who wants to carry the weapon has to buy it, and each officer
who does will have to undergo training.
This week, a series of two-day classes on the use and maintenance of
the AR-15 began. Eighty officers of about 512 on the force dipped into
their bank accounts and purchased the carbine, which costs about $1,000.
Before the carbine, the only weapon a St. Petersburg patrol officer
could draw on to deal with a threat from a distance of 50 yards was a
shotgun. The AR-15 is considered more powerful and far more accurate.
For a little more than a year, the Tampa Police Department also has
allowed its officers to buy their own carbines.
Harvey Scarborough, a two-year veteran of the St. Petersburg force, was among those who made the financial plunge.
"It allows me to be more effective as a police officer by being able to
equal threats that are already out there," said Scarborough, 22