Company Behind Shooting Targets of Children Received $2 Million From DHS
Contracts were for “training aids” and “paperboard”
Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
February 20, 2013
The company behind controversial shooting targets that
include images of children, pregnant women and elderly gun owners
received almost $2 million dollars in contracts from the Department of
Homeland Security.
Minnesota-based Law Enforcement Training Inc., which brags of its close relationship with the DHS and thousands of law enforcement agencies, has stoked outrage after producing shooting targets which
feature “non traditional” threats amidst banal environments such as a
pregnant woman in a nursery, a mother in a school playground and a
little boy.
The company reacted to the furore by
asserting the products helped override “hesitation on the part of cops
when deadly force is required on subjects with atypical age, frailty or
condition,” and to “break that stereotype on the range, regardless of
how slim the chances are of encountering a real life scenario that
involves a child, pregnant woman, etc.”
Following concerns that the issue could be linked with Homeland Security’s purchase of around 2 billion bullets
over the last year, which many fear is linked to preparations for
domestic disorder, it has now emerged that Law Enforcement Training Inc.
has racked up contracts worth almost $2 million dollars with the DHS over the last three years.
The vast majority of those contracts were for “training aids” and “paperboard,” according
to the USASpending.gov website, which lists numerous different
contracts each in the region of $150,000 and $180,000 dollars stretching
back to early 2010 and running through to July 2012.
While it is not known whether the DHS purchased the “no hesitation” targets, a company representative admitted to a customer that law enforcement agencies had “requested” at least one of the images which depicted a pregnant woman as a “threat”.
A customer who called Law Enforcement Inc. yesterday
told Infowars that the company informed him the targets were, “strictly
for Department of Homeland Security and other law enforcement agencies.”
The story has prompted widespread condemnation on the Internet, with Law Enforcement Inc. being slammed by Facebook users after it issued a statement.
Retired City of Houston police officer T.F. Stern reacted to the issue by remarking,
“There’s something wrong, seriously wrong here. If we start to
desensitize law enforcement officers, have them disregard humanity, to
feel nothing’s wrong in shooting a pregnant lady or an old man with a
shotgun inside his own home…then what kind of society have we become?
How will police officers react after they no longer believe they are
part of the society which they have been charged with policing, when
they have become used to shooting pregnant ladies and old men?”
View all the “no hesitation” targets, which are still available on the company’s website, below.
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