© Street Combatives 2022
21 Foot Rule
So many guys I talk to have this wild Hollywood
imagination of the realities and the glamors of a gun
fight. they think that having a gun in the cure all of all
eminent bad things that can happen. Because of their
pure ignorance, here is an excellent article of the
realities of an actual gun fight,, enjoy.
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Edged Weapon Defense: Is or was the 21-foot rule valid?
(From: PoliceOne.com June 13, 2005)
For more than 20 years now, a concept called the 21-
Foot Rule has been a core component in training
officers to defend themselves against edged weapons.
Originating from research by Salt Lake City trainer
Dennis Tueller and popularized by the Street Survival
Seminar and the seminal instructional video "Surviving
Edged Weapons," the "rule" states that in the time it
takes the average officer to recognize a threat, draw his
sidearm and fire 2 rounds at center mass, an average
subject charging at the officer with a knife or other
cutting or stabbing weapon can cover a distance of 21
feet.
The implication, therefore, is that when dealing with an
edged-weapon wielder at anything less than 21 feet an
officer had better have his gun out and ready to shoot
before the offender starts rushing him or else he risks
being set upon and injured or killed before he can draw
his sidearm and effectively defeat the attack.
Recently a Force Science News member, a deputy sheriff
from Texas, suggested that "it's time for a fresh look" at
the underlying principles of edged-weapon defense, to
see if they are "upheld by fresh research." He observed
that "the knife culture is growing, not shrinking," with
many people, including the homeless, "carrying
significant blades on the street." He noted that
compared to scientific findings, "anecdotal evidence is
not good enough when an officer is in court defending
against a wrongful death claim because he felt he had to
shoot some[body] with a knife at 0-dark:30 a.m."
As a prelude to more extensive studies of edged-
weapon-related issues, the Force Science Research
Center at Minnesota State University-Mankato has
responded by reexamining the 21-Foot Rule, arguably
the most widely taught and commonly remembered
element of edged-weapon defense.
After testing the Rule against FSRC's landmark findings
on action-reaction times and conferring with selected
members of its National and Technical Advisory Boards,
the Center has reached these conclusions, according to
Executive Director Dr. Bill Lewinski:
1. Because of a prevalent misinterpretation, the 21-Foot
Rule has been dangerously corrupted.
2. When properly understood, the 21-Foot Rule is still
valid in certain limited circumstances.
3. For many officers and situations, a 21-foot
reactionary gap is not sufficient.
4. The weapon that officers often think they can depend
on to defeat knife attacks can't be relied upon to protect
them in many cases.
5. Training in edged-weapon defense should by no
means be abandoned.
1. MISINTERPRETATION
"Unfortunately, some officers and apparently some
trainers as well have 'streamlined' the 21-Foot Rule in a
way that gravely distorts its meaning and exposes them
to highly undesirable legal consequences," Lewinski
says. Namely, they have come to believe that the Rule
means that a subject brandishing an edged weapon
when positioned at any distance less than 21 feet from
an officer can justifiably be shot.
For example, an article on the 21-Foot Rule in a highly
respected LE magazine states in its opening sentence
that "a suspect armed with an edged weapon and within
twenty-one feet of a police officer presents a deadly
threat." The "common knowledge" that "deadly force
against him is justified" has long been "accepted in
police and court circles," the article continues.
Statements like that, Lewinski says, "have led officers to
believe that no matter what position they're in, even
with their gun on target and their finger on the trigger,
they are in extreme danger at 21 feet. They believe they
don't have a chance of surviving unless they preempt the
suspect by shooting.
"However widespread that contaminated interpretation
may be, it is NOT accurate. A suspect with a knife within
21 feet of an officer is POTENTIALLY a deadly threat.
He does warrant getting your gun out and ready. But he
cannot be considered an actual threat justifying deadly
force until he takes the first overt action in furtherance
of intention--like starting to rush or lunge toward the
officer with intent to do harm. Even then there may be
factors besides distance that influence a force decision.
"So long as a subject is stationary or moving around but
not advancing or giving any indication he's about to
charge, it clearly is not legally justified to use lethal force
against him. Officers who do shoot in those
circumstances may find themselves subject to
disciplinary action, civil suits or even criminal charges."
Lewinski believes the misconception of the 21-Foot Rule
has become so common that some academies and in-
service training programs now are reluctant to include
the Rule as part of their edged-weapon defense
instruction for fear of non-righteous shootings resulting.
"When you talk about the 21-Foot Rule, you have to
understand what it really means when fully articulated
correctly in order to judge its value as a law enforcement
concept," Lewinski says. "And it does not mean 'less
than 21 feet automatically equals shoot.'"
2. VALIDITY
In real-world encounters, many variables affect time,
which is the key component of the 21-Foot Rule. What
is the training skill and stress level of the officer? How
fast and agile is he? How alert is he to preliminary cues
to aggressive movement? How agile and fast is the
suspect? Is he drunk and stumbling, or a young guy in a
ninja outfit ready to rock and roll? How adept is the
officer at drawing his holstered weapon? What kind of
holster does he have? What's the terrain? If it's
outdoors, is the ground bumpy or pocked with holes? Is
the suspect running on concrete, or on grass, or through
snow and across ice? Is the officer uphill and the suspect
downhill, or vice versa? If it's indoors, is the officer at
the foot of stairs and the suspect above him, or vice
versa? Are there obstacles between them? And so on.
These factors and others can impact the validity of the
21-Foot Rule because they affect an attacking suspect's
speed in reaching the officer, and the officer's speed in
reacting to the threatening charge.
The 21-Foot Rule was formulated by timing subjects
beginning their headlong run from a dead stop on a flat
surface offering good traction and officers standing
stationary on the same plane, sidearm holstered and
snapped in. The FSRC has extensively measured action
and reaction times under these same conditions.
Among other things, the Center has documented the
time it takes officers to make 20 different actions that
are common in deadly force encounters. Here are some
of the relevant findings that the FSRC applied in
reevaluating the 21-Foot Rule:
• Once he perceives a signal to do so, the AVERAGE
officer requires 1.5 seconds to draw from a snapped
Level II holster and fire one unsighted round at center
mass. Add 1/4 of a second for firing a second round, and
another 1/10 of a second for obtaining a flash sight
picture for the average officer.
• The fastest officer tested required 1.31 seconds to draw
from a Level II holster and get off his first unsighted
round. The slowest officer tested required 2.25 seconds.
• For the average officer to draw and fire an unsighted
round from a snapped Level III holster, which is
becoming increasingly popular in LE because of its extra
security features, takes 1.7 seconds.
• Meanwhile, the AVERAGE suspect with an edged
weapon raised in the traditional "ice-pick" position can
go from a dead stop to level, unobstructed surface
offering good traction in 1.5-1.7 seconds.
The "fastest, most skillful, most powerful" subject FSRC
tested "easily" covered that distance in 1.27 seconds.
Intense rage, high agitation and/or the influence of
stimulants may even shorten that time, Lewinski
observes.
Even the slowest subject "lumbered" through this
distance in just 2.5 seconds.
Bottom line: Within a 21-foot perimeter, most officers
dealing with most edged-weapon suspects are at a
decided - perhaps fatal - disadvantage if the suspect
launches a sudden charge intent on harming them.
"Certainly it is not safe to have your gun in your holster
at this distance," Lewinski says, and firing in hopes of
stopping an activated attack within this range may well
be justified.
But many unpredictable variables that are inevitable in
the field prevent a precise, all-encompassing truism
from being fashioned from controlled "laboratory"
research.
“If you shoot an edged-weapon offender before he is
actually on you or at least within reaching distance, you
need to anticipate being challenged on your decision by
people both in and out of law enforcement who do not
understand the sobering facts of action and reaction
times," says FSRC National Advisory Board member Bill
Everett, an attorney, use-of-force trainer and former
cop. "Someone is bound to say, 'Hey, this guy was 10
feet away when he dropped and died. Why'd you have to
shoot him when he was so far away from you?'"
Be able to articulate why you felt yourself or other
innocent party to be in "imminent or immediate life-
threatening jeopardy and why the threat would have
been substantially accentuated if you had delayed,"
Everett advises. You need specifically to mention the
first articulable motion that indicated the subject was
about to attack and was beyond your ability to influence
verbally."
And remember: No single 'rule' can arbitrarily be used
to determine when a particular level of force is lawful.
The 21-Foot Rule has value as a rough guideline,
illustrating the reactionary curve, but it is by no means
an absolute.
"The Supreme Court's landmark use-of-force decision,
in Graham v. Connor, established a 'reasonableness'
standard," Everett reminds. "You'll be judged ultimately
according to what a 'reasonable' officer would have
done. All of the facts and circumstances that make up
the dynamics between you and the subject will be
evaluated."
Of course, some important facts may be subtle and now
widely known or understood. That's where FSRC's
unique findings on lethal-force dynamics fit in. Explains
Lewinski: "The FSRC's research will add to your ability
to articulate and explain the facts and circumstances
and how they influenced your decision to use force."
3. MORE DISTANCE.
"In reality, the 21-Foot Rule--by itself--may not provide
officers with an adequate margin of protection," says Dr.
Bill Lewinski, FSRC's executive director. "It's easily
possible for suspects in some circumstances to launch a
successful fatal attack from a distance greater than 21
feet."
Among other police instructors, John Delgado, retired
training officer for the Miami-Dade (FL) PD, has
extended the 21-Foot Rule to 30 feet. "Twenty-one feet
doesn't really give many officers time to get their gun
out and fire accurately," he says. "Higher-security
holsters complicate the situation, for one thing. Some
manufacturers recommend 3,000 pulls to develop
proficiency with a holster. Most cops don't do that, so it
takes them longer to get their gun out than what's ideal.
Also shooting proficiency tends to deteriorate under
stress. Their initial rounds may not even hit."
Beyond that, there's the well-established fact that a
suspect often can keep going from momentum,
adrenalin, chemicals and sheer determination, even
after being shot. "Experience informs us that people
who are shot with a handgun do not fall down instantly
nor does the energy of a handgun round stop their
forward movement," states Chris Lawrence, team leader
of DT training at the Ontario (Canada) Police College
and an FSRC Technical Advisory Board member. Says
Lewinski: "Certain arterial or spinal hits may drop an
attacker instantly.
But otherwise a wounded but committed suspect may
have the capacity to continue on to the officer's location
and complete his deadly intentions." That's one reason
why tactical distractions, which we'll discuss in a
moment, should play an important role in defeating an
edged-weapon attack, even when you are able to shoot
to defend yourself.
"When working with bare-minimum margins, any delay
in an officer responding to a deadly threat can equate to
injury or death," reinforces attorney and use-of-force
trainer Bill Everett, an FSRC National Advisory Board
member. "So the officer must key his or her reaction to
the first overt act indicating that a lethal attack is
coming.
"More distance and time give the officer not only more
tactical options but also more opportunity to confirm
the attacker's lethal intention before selecting a deadly
force response."
4. MISPLACED CONFIDENCE.
Relying on OC or a Taser for defeating a charging
suspect is probably a serious mistake. Gary Klugiewicz,
a leading edged-weapon instructor and a member of
FSRC's National Advisory Board, points out that firing
out Taser barbs may be an effective option in dealing
with a threatening but STATIONARY subject. But
depending on this force choice to stop a charging
suspect could be disastrous.
With fast, on-rushing movement, "there's a real chance
of not hitting the subject effectively and of not having
sufficient time" for the electrical charge--or for a blast of
OC--to take effect before he is on you, Klugiewicz says.
Lewinski agrees, adding: "A rapid charge at an officer is
a common characteristic of someone high on chemicals
or severely emotionally disturbed. More research is
needed, but it appears that when a Taser isn't effective it
is most often with these types of suspects."
Smug remarks about offenders foolishly "bringing a
knife to a gunfight" betray dangerous thinking about the
ultimate force option, too. Some officers are cockily
confident they'll defeat any sharp-edged threat because
they carry a superior weapon: their service sidearm.
This belief may be subtly reinforced by fixating on
distances of 21 or 30 feet, as if this is the typical reaction
space you'll have in an edged-weapon encounter.
The truth is that where edged-weapon attacks are
concerned, "close-up confrontations are actually the
norm," points out Sgt. Craig Stapp, a firearms trainer
with the Tempe (AZ) P.D. and a member of FSRC's
Technical Advisory Board. "A suspect who knows how to
effectively deploy a knife can be extremely dangerous in
these circumstances. Even those who are not highly
trained can be deadly, given the close proximity of the
contact, the injury knives are capable of, and the time it
takes officers to process and react to an assault.
"At close distances, standing still and drawing are
usually not the best tactics to employ and may not even
be possible." At a distance of 10 feet, a subject is less
than half a second away from making the first cut on an
officer, Lewinski's research shows. Therefore, rather
than relying on a holstered gun, officers must be trained
in hands-on techniques to deflect or delay the use of the
knife, to control it and/or to remove it from the
attacker's grasp, or to buy time to get their gun out.
These methods have to be simple enough to be learned
by the average officer.
Two techniques that bear reinforcement are illustrated
in the well-known training video "Surviving Edged
Weapons", for which Gary Klugiewicz was a technical
consultant. One is a deflection technique called Sweep
and Disengage. The other is a tactic for controlling the
attacker's weapon hand, called by the acronym G.U.N.
(Grab...Undo...Neutralize).
Stapp strongly believes that training in edged-weapon
defense should prepare an officer to deal psychologically
with getting cut or stabbed, a realistic probability with
lag time, close encounters and desperate control
attempts. "Officers need to be trained to continue to
fight," Stapp says. "They will not have time to stop and
assess how severe the wound is. You don't want them in
the mind-set, 'I've been cut, I'm going to die.' They must
remain focused on stopping the attack, taking out the
guy who is the threat to them."
Checking yourself over for injury after the offender is
subdued is important, too, Klugiewicz says. "Some
survivors of edged-weapon attacks report that they were
not aware of being cut or stabbed when the injury
occurred. They thought they had just been punched and
didn't realize what really happened until later."
5. TRAINING.
"Assuming it is presented accurately and in context with
the many variables that shape knife encounters, the 21-
Foot Rule can be a valuable training aid," Lewinski says.
"As a role-playing exercise, it provides a dramatic and
memorable demonstration of how fast an offender can
close distance, and it can motivate officers to improve
their performance skills."
Experiment with it and you may conclude, like Delgado,
that 21 feet is not enough of a safety margin for your
troops.
You might also use 21-Foot Rule exercises to test tactical
methods for imposing lag time on offenders in order to
buy more reaction time for officers. These could range
from using or creating obstacles (standing behind a tree
or shoving a chair between you and the offender) to
moving yourself strategically. You're probably familiar
with the Tactical L, for example, in which an officer
moves laterally to a charging offender's line of attack.
With the right timing, this surprises and slows the
attacker as he processes the movement and scrambles to
redirect his assault, and gives the officer opportunity to
draw and get on target.
Lewinski favors a variation called the Tactical J. Here,
instead of moving 90 degrees off line, the officer moves
obliquely forward at a 45-degree angle to the oncoming
offender. "This tends to be more confusing to the
suspect and requires more of a radical change on his
part to come after you," Lewinski says. "But the timing
has to be such that the suspect is fully committed to his
charge and can't readily adjust to what you've done.
That takes lots of practice with a wide variety of training
partners."
If nothing else, training with the 21-Foot Rule will help
officers better estimate just how far 21 feet is. Without a
good deal of practice, most can't accurately gauge that
distance, Lewinski says, and thus tend to sabotage
appropriate defensive reactions.
Don't forget, though, that most edged-weapon attacks
are "up close and personal." That means training must
include effective empty-hand-control techniques, close
quarters shooting drills and weapon retention. "We
need to develop the ability to draw our sidearm, get on
target and GET HITS extremely fast," while moving as a
diversionary measure if possible, says Stapp. "Close-
range shooting--under 10 feet--will most effectively be
accomplished when an officer has developed the ability
to get on target 'by feel,' without using his sights."
Lewinski also recommends drills to imprint rapid re-
holstering techniques. Re-holstering may become
necessary if there's a sudden change in threat level--say
the offender throws his weapon down and is no longer
presenting an imminent threat justifying deadly force--
and the officer needs both hands free to deal with him.
There's little doubt that the "knife culture" and related
attacks on officers are dangerously flourishing. Edged-
weapon assaults are a staple of the news reports of
police incidents from across the U.S. and Canada on the
website of FSRC's strategic partner, PoliceOne.com.
Recently an officer in New York City was slashed in the
face during a fight that broke out on a man-with-a-gun
call...in Ohio, a state trooper fatally shot a berserk
motorist who charged him with a hatchet... another
offender, who called 911 in Pennsylvania to report he
was having a heart attack, ended up shot 13 times and
killed after commands and OC failed to stop him from
lunging at a trooper with a chain saw...
In Calgary (Ont.) a blood-soaked man waved a bloody
butcher knife over his head and charged at constables
who responded to a domestic.. a suspected rapist
attacked a Chicago detective with a screwdriver after
luring him into an interrogation room by asking for a
cigarette...in the reception area of a California prison, an
inmate serving time for trying to kill a cop stabbed a
correctional officer to death with a shank...in Idaho, an
out-of-control teenager punched holes in the walls of his
house with a 15-inch bayonet, then turned on a
responding officer with the blade and sliced his uniform
before the cop shot him....
"Given today's environment, rather than draw back on
edged-weapon training, officers and agencies should be
expanding it," Lewinski declares. "Edged-weapon
attacks are serious and should be taken seriously by
trainers, officers and administrators alike. Finding out
what works best in the way of realistic tactical defenses
and then training those tactics as broadly as possible
has never been more needed."
Take this information for what it is worth. I'm not trying
to dispute research that has already been published, nor
am I trying to take on any specific group or theory. This
is merely what I have been told by a little fewer than
200 survivors. Take it for what it is worth and use it as
you please.
END
Street Combatives
Specializing in Close Quarter and Knife Combatives