The present invention relates generally to law enforcement and particularly to a new weapon of intermediate lethality that will significantly improve the offensive and defensive capabilities of police officers.
Standard equipment for police officers typically includes a sidearm (pistol) and a baton. Police officers frequently have to confront miscreants willing and able to launch assaults on officers that have only drawn their batons. Often police officers sustain serious injury or even death from such assaults. Yet, if the assailants are unarmed, mentally ill, or enraged by a domestic situation, using lethal force by shooting them often results in public backlash. However, reluctance to use the force necessary to subdue such violent assailants risks harm to police. Even if such assailants are armed with knives, broken bottles, and the like, use of the more lethal force of a pistol shot to subdue them may result in censure and lawsuits.
Quelling rioters is another situation where police use of firearms is unacceptable, even though some may attempt to goad police into using lethal force, hoping to create martyrs that will further their cause.
It would be a major benefit to law enforcement if police officers had a weapon of intermediate lethality, i.e., more lethal than a baton, but less lethal than a firearm. Such a weapon should require little maintenance, require minimum training, be inexpensive, highly portable, and at all times immediately at hand.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a law enforcement weapon of intermediate lethality that can be carried by police officers for ready use to subdue miscreants.
This weapon is in the form of a saber comprising an elongated blade of generally triangular cross section, having first and second concave sides converging from respective first edges to a common sharp edge, and a third side joining the first edges of the first and second sides, the first, second and third sides being tapered along their lengths to provide a tip at a first end of the blade. A hilt is fixed to a second end of the blade and comprises a handle and a guard.
The invention accordingly comprises the features of construction, combination of elements, and arrangement of parts, all as described hereinafter, and the scope of the invention will be indicated in the claims.
For a full understanding of the nature and aspects of the present invention, reference may be had to the following Detailed Description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which:
The law enforcement weapon of the present invention is in the form of a saber, generally indicated at 10 in
As seen in
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The length of blade 12 may be in range of 24 to 48 inches. Representative blade cross section dimensions are, at the hilt, 1.5 inches along vertical axis 30 from edge 24 to convex side 26 and 1.5 inches along a horizontal axis 32 between concave side edges 21 and 23.
The saber of the present invention may be provided in two versions, as a short-bladed weapon, 24 to 36 inches from hilt to tip, for patrol duty and a long-bladed weapon, 30 to 48 inches from hilt to tip, for riot duty. The shorter blade length of the patrol version is better suited for use in close quarters, such as a room, and can be wielded without being encumbered by walls, furniture, and bystanders. In most cases, a police officer should be able to hold a miscreant at bay with the saber while remaining beyond the reach of knives, clubs, and other items used as weapons. The miscreant should then recognize that the officer has the greater reach and hopefully surrender. If he does not surrender, the officer can either batter him into submission with the heal of the saber blade or slash him with the sharp blade edge 24. By virtue of the divergence of the concave sides of the blade, cuts inflected on the miscreant would be largely superficial. If these tactics fail, thrusting the saber to inflict more disabling stab wounds on the miscreant would be used to subdue him While stab wounds can be serious, they are more survivable than bullet wounds.
For riot duty, the long-bladed saber would be used in the same manner to keep rioters at bay and to repel those that attempt to attack police officers by inflicting injuries sufficient to quell the rioter's zeal.
The short-bladed saber may be carried in a belt scabbard, and the long-bladed saber may be slung across an officer's back.
The invention being thus described, it will be apparent that the saber may be varied in numerous ways. For example, to reduce the saber's lethality, the blade tip may be blunted, as indicated in phantom at 34 in