Comment on This is a Test

<- View Parent
ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com ⁨7⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago

Fine, “strapped” not “cuffed,” and cops have their own cars, they’d ride those probably in close proximity to your ambulance, thus arriving at a similar enough time to constitute use of the word “accompanied,” which was originally used in the context of “after you drop them off at the hospital where the surgeon from OP’s question works.” So, are they strapped to the gurney, followed by police in the ambulance, then the police accompany them into the building and hospital room? If yes: “Close enough, sorry I used the wrong word for the restraints.”

They aren’t just gonna hand you a fresh murder suspect and say “can you drop him at our place on Tuesday,” he’s restrained somehow and accompanied by someone, unless your area’s emergency services works differently than my area, and every area I’m aware of, from the ground up.

So anyway, you’re a medical professional of sorts, you ever fire a gun? Do you have any idea how easy it is to learn how to handle them properly?

(Btw they’ve rolled out the vests, my buddy is a paramedic and he has em. Only good up to .357 and not stab proof afaik, but it’s something!)

source
Sort:hotnewtop