November 10, 2015

*Why is the FBI Spending $80 Million on a New Gun?*

By Jonathan F. Keiler
<http://www.americanthinker.com/author/jonathan_f_keiler/>

When conservatives complain about profligate federal spending, part of the
problem is the sheer magnitude of the federal budget, where mere tens of
millions seem hardly worth talking about in a flood of dollars, both taxed
and borrowed, that is in the trillions.  That of course, allows all sorts
of waste in which a few million here and there hardly seems worth fighting
over.  Take for example, the FBI’s recent decision to reequip their agents
with an entirely new and entirely unnecessary handgun, which will cost
American taxpayers
<http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/2015/10/fbi-plans-to-spend-85-million-on-new-9mm-pistols/>
something like $80,000,000.

The FBI has an interesting history
<http://www.americanrifleman.org/articles/2011/8/22/a-history-of-fbi-handguns/>
of handgun use that is closely followed.  An important event in that
history is a shootout in Miami
<https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2011/april/miami_041111/miami_041111> in
1986 in which two FBI agents were killed, and several others wounded.
After the gunfight the FBI decided to reevaluate their handguns.  The
gun-battle was an extremely rare occurrence in which a couple of hardened
criminals decided to go down fighting with agents.  Despite being fatally
wounded by agents firing a variety of weapons
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1986_FBI_Miami_shootout#Weaponry_and_injuries>
(.38 and .357 magnum revolvers, 9mm pistols, and shotguns) these criminals,
still managed to kill and injure several before they expired.

After the Miami shootout the FBI decided that the revolvers and 9mm
pistols, which were the standard issue weapons at the time, had inadequate
stopping power.  After number of stops and starts in which various 9mm
pistols were issued and with different ammo loads, the agency decided to
switch to a new and more potent handgun that fired a 10mm round.  However,
the hard recoiling 10mm round proved to be too powerful for many agents,
especially as the agency incorporated more women into the ranks.  The FBI
quickly abandoned the 10mm.  Reluctant to return to the 9mm round, it
decided to switch to a newer round, the Smith and Wesson .40, a cartridge
that fired a bullet comparable to the 10mm, but with less recoil.

In 1997 the FBI adopted the Glock 22 and 23 pistols which fire the .40 SW.
The Glocks are excellent pistols, combining affordability, light weight,
compactness (especially in the G23), reliability and accuracy.   The FBI’s
decision to switch to the .40 Glock influenced police departments
countrywide, and today the .40 is one of the most popular, if not the most
popular pistol caliber used by American police departments, with Glock one
of the most popular (if not the most popular) manufacturer for police use.
The FBI purchased thousands of Glocks.

Now the FBI has decided that the .40 Glock is no longer acceptable, and has
put out the big contract for a new handgun, in -- wait for it -- 9mm.
According to the FBI, improvements in ammunition over recent years have
evened out the differences between the .40 and 9mm so that it behooves the
agency to return to the round
<http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2015/10/robert-farago/fbi-ditching-40-for-9mm/>
it abandoned after the Miami shootout.  Of course, this being the federal
government, the switch back to 9mm will mean abandoning tens of millions of
dollars’ worth of perfectly good .40 Glocks and millions of rounds of ammo
in stock, in favor of a new pistol, which appears will be the SIG 320, at
the cost of tens of millions of dollars.  To make matters worse, Glock
22/23s can easily be converted to 9mm
<http://www.safetysolutionsacademy.com/convert-glock-22-9mm-ssa/>, so that
the purchase of a new handgun in favor of the lighter round seems even more
wasteful.  And even if the FBI allows agents to continue using some Glocks,
or only issues the new 9mm to new agents (doubtful), the switch will cost a
lot of money.

In justifying these changes, the FBI harkens back to the Miami shootout.
But in reality, it is worth questioning whether the FBI even needs to arm
most of its agents.  Today, an FBI agent is as likely to be a recent law
school graduate or MBA as an experienced cop.  And most of the work that
FBI agents do is not streetwise police work, but investigations where
advanced degrees, technological know-how and reading comprehension matter
more than skill with a firearm.

The last FBI agent to die in a shootout
<https://www.odmp.org/search/browse/us-government> fell in 1996.  In 2008
an agent was killed by random fire serving a search warrant.  The only
other agent to die by a hostile act since 1996 was killed by the collapse
of the Twin Towers in 2001.

Of course, the same question might be asked of the scores of federal
agencies that arm special agents or other enforcement or security
employees, from the Postal Service to the EPA to the Bureau of Land
Management.  At least 73 federal agencies
<http://www.theblaze.com/contributions/bite-the-bullet-weve-got-too-many-agencies-with-armed-agents/>
now have some kind of armed agent, and a smaller but still significant
number, their own para-military SWAT teams
<http://www.nationalreview.com/article/376053/united-states-swat-john-fund>.

Not only doesn’t the FBI need a new firearm, it probably already has many
more firearms (and rounds) than it needs, not to mention all the time and
energy spent training agents that have a miniscule chance of ever using
their guns.  Currently, the FBI employs nearly 14,000 armed special agents
<https://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/todays-fbi-facts-figures/facts-and-figures-031413.pdf>.
By what rational standard is such a huge armed force required on the basis
of historical or even reasonable theoretical future need?  Here are a few
of suggestions that would not only save money, but also probably provide a
safer and less militarized society:

   - Disarm most agents and designate a small number of skilled and highly
   trained shooters to accompany other agents in particularly risky
   situations, or just have the shooters handle such matters, e.g., making
   arrests, serving warrants, etc., or
   - Designate the FBI as the sole civilian federal agency to conduct
   investigations and security tasks that the government requires, including
   protecting the President and other high officials—certainly the Secret
   Service has not covered itself in glory
   
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/03/12/politics/secrect-service-scandals-gate-crasher-dui/>
   recently.  This would consolidate training, arms and ammunition purchases
   and training, create more uniform standards for agents, and eliminate
   rampant duplication and excess expense, and
   - Audit all the federal agencies with armed agents, including the FBI to
   determine just how necessary these personnel are the federal mission.  This
   should include historical data on the just how frequently, and in which
   circumstances, armed special agents have actually been exposed to hostile
   action or had any justification for drawing or using their weapons.

If President Obama and the Democrats really want to reduce the number of
handguns in the country, they could start with their own employees.  That
would be an executive order that a lot of fiscal conservatives could get
behind.

I have no expectation that such a thing will ever be done or even seriously
considered.  This multiplicity of unnecessary costs to the taxpayer must
run into the billions, but we have become so used to huge federal budgets
that even ten digit expenses hardly raise an eyebrow.  And by those
standards, the mere high eight digit number that it will cost to replace
the FBI’s current handgun will hardly be noticed, buying weapons and ammo
for thousands of agents who do not need them, and will almost certainly
never use them.



Read more:
http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/11/why_is_the_fbi_spending_80_million_on_a_new_gun.html#ixzz3r8F3BS6U
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