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    OK Guardsmen attend multi-agency rifle school

    OK Guardsmen attend multi-agency rifle school

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Tyler Woodward | Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Jim Lilly, a staff training deputy, discusses...... read more read more

    OKLAHOMA CITY, OK, UNITED STATES

    06.08.2016

    Story by Senior Airman Kasey Phipps 

    137th Special Operations Wing

    OKLAHOMA CITY - Members from the Will Rogers Air National Guard Base (WRANGB) out of Oklahoma City, joined officers from local police agencies to sharpen their firing skills during Patrol Rifle Operator School, May 24-26, 2016, at the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office Training Facility in Oklahoma City.

    Three 137th Security Forces Squadron (SFS) members and one Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) Airman from the 146th Air Support Operations Squadron, attended the school, which was held by the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office.

    “It gives us repetitive training on the basic fundamentals – weapon manipulation, malfunctions, maintenance, understanding what your sights are telling you, what different rounds do at different ranges,” said Staff Sgt. Luke Wagner, an assistant course instructor from the 137 SFS who attended the course with several other WRANGB Airmen the week before. “As security forces members, if we ever ran into a real world situation, we’re going to be under a lot of stress. The only way to train for that is to do everything right in training here. ”

    The course provides agencies with unique, cost-effective law enforcement training that allows the students, who oftentimes find themselves acting as the first line of defense against violence, to participate at no cost.

    “This gives us more opportunity throughout the year to train,” said Wagner. “It also doesn’t cost us anything, except for ammo. Plus, there are more schools available through the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office than there are in the Air Force.”

    Overall, the course gave students the opportunity to work alongside agencies and military branches that they would potentially work with in real-world hostile situations.

    “I’ve worked with many policing agencies during my normal patrol duties and natural disasters,” said student Tyrie Haught, deputy sheriff with the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office and also a CH-47 Chinook pilot with the 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 149th Aviation Regiment, Oklahoma Army National Guard. “Military, law enforcement, first responders … we all end up working together. It’s good to work all of our differences out in a training environment so that when we get to a real mission, we get right to work.”

    This level of teamwork and tactical trading of skills allows the Sheriff’s Office Patrol Rifle Operator School to grow each year. Despite the cut in the Sheriff’s Office Training Division’s budget, it allows agencies to learn from each other and create better mission outcomes in the future.

    “We can’t let our programs stagnate,” said Sgt. Jim Lilly, a staff training deputy with the Sheriff’s Office Training Division. “We feel like we have an obligation to be on the same page with the people that are involved in law enforcement. When we all get a big call, we’re all going to be safer and more effective at what we’re doing.”

    WRANGB Airmen and local law enforcement agencies alike attend several of the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office’s average of 275 courses a year, fulfilling yearly training requirements and also taking advantage of the ammo-only entry fees to receive training that goes above and beyond any agency requirement.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.08.2016
    Date Posted: 06.09.2016 02:38
    Story ID: 200338
    Location: OKLAHOMA CITY, OK, US

    Web Views: 23
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN