Here is a true life story. On my Bullet One list I have Officer Jeffrey Yaslowitz listed as the 869th officer shot in the head. Please read what his eight-year-old daughter said about him after he was shot in the head and killed: “I want my daddy back. I want to kiss him.”
K9 Officer Jeffrey Yaslowitz, 39, St. Petersburg PD, Florida, 1/24/11, while serving a warrant on suspect wanted for aggravated battery, he went to the attic where the suspect’s wife said he was and possibly armed. Officer Yaslowitz, knowing the suspect was possibly armed and without wearing a ballistic face shield and helmet, climbed up through a hole in the dark attic, exposing his head first, then he climbed all the way in. As he was putting handcuffs on the suspect, the suspect shot Officer Yaslowitz in the head twice. He probably died instantly. Just before shooting the officer, the suspect told the officers that they had him, and then he shot the officer in the head twice.
Recall his daughter's words. How can anyone not cry after hearing children talk like this about their fathers? In my opinion, Officer Yaslowitz, would probably be alive today and with his family had he had a ballistic face shield and helmet on because they would have stopped the bullets that hit him in the head, allowing him and his partner, also in the attic, to return fire on the suspect.
All police officers who respond to this kind of incident should have ballistic face shields and helmets stowed in their cruisers for instant access. They should place them on their heads before leaving their cruisers (officers have been shot in the head leaving their cruisers) and before confronting suspects. When a suspect starts shooting, the officer does not have time to go back to the cruiser for the face shield and helmet.
If officers train while wearing the helmet and face shield at the target range or at home, the weight should be less noticeable in a combat situation.