"I was in the military," he explains. "And I knew that it may not be the best tactic to walk right down the middle of the road, but I wasn't going to second guess the decision that anyone was making at the time. We knew this guy had killed several people and was a dangerous individual. We didn't know how far down the road the vehicle was. As we stood at the command post, he could open fire at any time, so we needed to act quickly."
West also notes that Drega was different than many suspects. For one, he'd taken the time to put on Phillips' trooper hat so as to confuse the officers that first spotted him on the bank. For another, he was content to stay and shoot it out with the intent to take out as many cops as possible.
"A lot of times, people commit suicide in these types of situations, but this guy was different. We picked up over the radio that he shot Wayne Saunders and his house was on fire, so he was on a rampage. We could have flanked him on both sides of the road and swept the area as opposed to walking in line formation down the road," West says.
Ironically, the same rifle scope that'd served Drega well in his earlier acts of madness may have been his undoing during the frontal assault by West and Brooks. In trying to acquire the officers in his scope as opposed to picking up his front sights, Drega left himself vulnerable a split-second longer than he might have otherwise. And although West had considered the possibility that Drega had done another ambush hit and run with his first volley, footprints they found in the woods indicated that the man had been situated in pretty much the same place for the whole time.
"I think he was waiting for an opportunity to take another shot," West says.