Is there anything else he would have done differently?
"I'd been on patrol (off training) for only a few months," notes Olszynski. "I'd worked with Gary in the jails, but not in a coordinated situation. I didn't know he'd gone off in the opposite direction. I thought he was behind me because he ran up the stairs right behind me. I didn't realize Gary wasn't behind me until I heard him yelling. Looking back, I definitely would have told him to come down the same row of cars with me. Personally, I would have slowed down, too. I was moving pretty quickly because when I saw Knight running, I thought I would see him running out the back of the parking structure. That's why when he suddenly popped out, I found myself caught off guard in the middle of two parking spaces. I didn't have any cover to hide behind if he started shooting right away.
"If I'd slowed down a little bit, it would have still probably ended up the same," Olszynski adds. "But it would have been safer for me, because if I had Gary behind me to keep an eye out for the suspect down range, I probably would have knelt down and looked beneath the cars for the suspect's feet."
Another thing that Olszynski learned during this incident is to make sure your gun is ready to fire during this kind of situation. "I left the shotgun's safety on," reflects Olszynski. "At least I recognized it within a split-second. Had it been off, the whole thing would have been over a lot faster. As it was, nothing happened with the first round I tried to squeeze off because of the safety. How I forgot, I don't know. But I had-and that marred my chance to take him out with a headshot."
The lessons didn't stop there.