Be a Hero: The Essential Survival Guide to Active-Shooter Events
By John Geddes, Alun Rees and Don Mann
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About this ebook
It’s never going to be you. Then one day you hear the clatter of automatic fire at the mall. You have been drawn into the chaos and terror of an active shooter event. What do you do? Who do you turn to?
Be a Hero is the essential guide to terrorist attacks that will help you survive. Former Special Air Service terror expert John Geddes will explain how to cope with a life-threatening event. He shows you how to make clear decisions and beat the odds by:
Dealing with fear through simple and effective techniques to bring the chemical urges generated by terror at least partially under control
Escaping and evading when possible, using everyday objects and landmarks for protection
Fighting back if needed, with methods to disarm an active shooter and to use items at hand as weapons
Using a weapon if you are licensed to carry, shooting to kill without collateral damage or being mistaken for a perpetrator
Providing medical assistance to deal with traumatic battlefield injury and save lives
This is not a book primarily for survivalists and preppers.’ Be a Hero is a book for ordinary men and women who could find themselves in the middle of an extraordinary moment. It will help them find the hero insideand live to tell the tale.
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Be a Hero - John Geddes
Preface
It will never happen to you, will it?
You’re walking to work through a London street, sipping coffee in a Mumbai hotel or a Paris café. Maybe you’re in the crowd at a marathon in Boston or studying in a high school at Columbine. All is peaceful, as it all should be. And then the gates of hell open. Windows implode; the physical impact of shock waves strikes you as a device explodes nearby. Whether or not you survive a bomb blast is a complete draw of the lottery. You are one of the lucky ones, but then the shooting begins and you hear the rattle of automatic gunfire coming your way. Terror takes hold of you. What do you do next? Which way do you turn, and who can you turn to?
In military terms you have, in effect, been ambushed—but you’re a civilian. You’ve had none of the training that automatically kicks in when a soldier comes under attack. You’ve not been tested under fire. You don’t understand the tactical nuances of the choices you next make.
Shock, fear, and hysteria will take over. You will not be prepared for decision making but you’ll be faced with life-or-death choices as an active shooter picks victims at random.
I can help you. My name is John Geddes and I’ve written this guide to help you survive. It’s designed as an aid for civilians in the event they are drawn into the chaos and terror of an active shooter event.
I’ve drawn on my extensive experience as a Special Air Service warrant officer on active duty alongside other elite troops. I took part in scores of anti-terror operations and covert interdictions around the globe, frequently with colleagues from US Delta Force. And as a young soldier fighting in the Falkland War, I had a sobering introduction to the realities of battlefield casualties.
I learned more when I left the Special Forces to pursue a career protecting TV crews, diplomats, and businessmen on perilous journeys into the insurgency and jihad of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Africa. I shepherded them through riots, bombings, and ambushes by gun and grenade.
Over the years, I’ve briefed hundreds of clients on how to react when danger presents. I can brief you too on how to best control the inevitable panic. I’ll equip you with the tools needed to make lucid decisions in the midst of utter confusion and chaos.
It seems barely a week goes by without some new outrage unfolding on our television screens, and the numbers are increasing at a frantic rate.
The facts on this are stark. In 2010, fifteen terrorist attacks outside of war zones were recorded worldwide. By 2015, the numbers had rocketed to 118 separate atrocities. In the first three months of 2016 alone, twenty-five attacks occurred, including the destabilizing attacks on the Belgian capital, Brussels. By the end of the year, 432 people had been murdered, and hundreds more were injured, in terror attacks in the United States and Europe. This included the worst terror outrage in American history at the Pulse nightclub in Florida.
On average, twenty mass shootings occur every year in the United States; these devastating incidents usually last no more than twenty minutes and usually a lot less.
If you count the tally in war zones such as Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Libya, and Iraq, the number of incidents soars into the tens of thousands. Countless thousands of innocent people around the globe have been affected by situations of extreme danger played out in otherwise everyday settings—and there’s no sign it will abate.
Indeed, new threats emerge with random knife and machete attacks in public places by jihadist beheaders intent on spreading raw terror.
This book represents a commonsense approach to the global epidemic of violent attacks on our society. People should hope for the best but be prepared for the worst in a world at war.
That’s why I’ve drawn on my experiences to write this indispensable guide to the unacceptable realities of modern terror. My aim is to underpin your daily lives during these threatening times by giving you the knowledge to come out safely on the other side.
The title Be a Hero reflects the truth. You can be a hero simply by keeping your head while others panic. You can be a hero by offering emergency medical help at the scene.
You don’t have to take on an active shooter to be a hero, but you are a hero if you do. Simply making a decision in the face of such danger is courageous. Being decisive is being heroic.
At the core of what I have to say lies an inalienable truth: We are not sheep. We do not have to wait to be slaughtered. We can act to protect ourselves.
Given good fortune, a brave heart, and the glimmer of an opportunity, the skills you learn in this book could help you stop an active shooter in his tracks.
God forbid you should ever need these skills. If you do, then I hope they’ll help you to Be a Hero.
John Geddes
September 2016
Introduction
THE BIG PICTURE
Despite all the odds, the worst has happened and you’ve come under attack by bomb and bullet. The litany of fear will follow. Disorientation, hyperventilation, a heart-bursting pulse rate, surging adrenaline, and tunnel vision. You don’t know which way to turn.
What do you do next? Who do you turn to? And which way should you turn? In the chapters that follow, this book will deal with all the issues in this broad-brush overview.
The aftermath of a bombing is an extreme environment, but I’ll give you the knowledge to cope and the basic skills to help yourself and the injured.
An active shooter situation brings different challenges. I’ll take you step-by-step through the decision-making processes that will enable you to evade and escape the killer.
I’ll also talk you through some basic measures to help you to take direct action against an assailant if that’s what you have to do. You may have no other choice. It may be a case of do or die.
The issues of a combined assault where an explosion is followed by a shooting attack will also be discussed. This is a particularly disorienting and confusing situation. I’ll help you with it.
We’ll take the three basic situations with which you may be confronted—a bombing, a shooting, or a combination of the two—and work through the permutations of the actions to take in each scenario.
Your response in the first few moments of an attack is vital and may ordain your personal outcome. The brain’s emergency response system will flood your body with neurochemicals that prompt the primal responses of freeze, flight, or fight.
It was meant to be that way. Mankind first evolved to live and hunt among big, predatory beasts. The initial freeze response is designed to keep you from being spotted by a dangerous predator. That’s precisely what an active shooter is—a dangerous predator.
Flight reflexes follow when your senses judge you have a chance of escape and your system is flooded with adrenaline. If the flight strategy is unsuccessful and you’re unlucky enough to be cornered, the fight reflex kicks in. Make no mistake—in a life-threatening situation, you will find yourself fighting to the death.
Other chemical messages from the brain such as anger, revenge, or the desire to save the lives of others may trigger the fight reaction even if you have the option of escape.
Let’s hope all those hardwired reflexes work. Let’s hope you’re so motionless you fade into the background and aren’t noticed by an active shooter. Let’s hope when you make a break for it, your timing is good enough not to catch a burst of automatic fire. If you decide to chance retaliating against the assailant, let’s hope the fight reflex is so powerful that you take him down.
After the first seconds and minutes of relying on those Stone Age responses, you will then need to control and channel the effects of the adrenaline and cortisol chemicals surging through your system.
In effect, you’ve been turbocharged and you need to remove your foot from the pedal. Learn to regulate those urges and make more considered and rational choices to survive.
Knowledge leads to understanding, so in the chapters that follow, I’ll explain the processes that unfold when the brain’s danger radar sets off the chain reaction of freeze, flight, or fight. I’ll explain how you can channel the surge of adrenaline into critical actions that will allow you to make the best of the worst possible situation.
These days, terror comes uninvited to our doorsteps. In the western democracies of Europe and the United States, jihadists deliberately target ordinary people going about their everyday business or during their leisure time. In the same way, paranoid gunmen run rampant through our communities and college campuses, killing indiscriminately.
The average profile of an active shooter is very consistent. In 98 percent of incidents the shooter acts alone. And 96 percent of them are men, which is why I will refer to them as he
or him
throughout the book.
Around 40 percent of events end when the active shooter commits suicide. Most of the remaining events end with him being shot. Very few shooters are taken alive.
Terrorist attacks are not confined to developed economies. Ordinary folk across Africa, the Middle East, and the Indian subcontinent are subjected to lethal sectarian attacks by bomb and bullet, too.
This book can help anyone, anywhere in the world. And to be clear, I have no intention of engaging in a rant about the evils of extreme Islam or in a critical commentary on the gun laws of any country.
Those issues are not my concern except where they dictate the way an attack is conducted. Motives are irrelevant when bullets are fired at random. Religious intolerance or voices in the head, jihadist or paranoid college nerd—it matters not. All that matters is survival.
Which brings me again to the title of this book—Be a Hero. It’s fundamental. My definition of what constitutes a hero is not confined to the military heroics that win the Medal of Honor.
Society recognizes, and gratefully acknowledges, the gallantry of a trained soldier, sailor, or airman whose endeavors go above and beyond the call of duty. An unarmed, untrained civilian has some unique challenges to overcome yet is still able to exhibit heroism in different ways.
So, in my eyes, you’re a hero if you survive a bombing or a shooting and then go on to give medical assistance to your wounded fellows. Similarly, if you manage to evade an active shooter and lead a group of terrified people to safety, then you’re a hero. In the heat of the moment, some individuals might instinctively want to attack the assailant. This book offers you some core skills to be that hero, too. There are also documented cases of people taking a bullet to save the life of a loved one or, sometimes, a complete stranger. Such selfless valor is beyond words.
For the most part, police chiefs in the western world advise against direct action, promoting instead a leave it to the experts
philosophy. I fundamentally disagree with them.
But I agree with the Homeland Security Department’s advice: As a last resort, attempt to take the active shooter down. When the shooter is at close range and you cannot flee, your chance of survival is much greater if you try to incapacitate him.
I’d go a step further and say there are situations when certain capable and determined individuals should actively seek confrontation with the shooter. This largely means people with combat experience and concealed carry–permit holders whose intervention could save innocent lives.
Often, long delays occur while official forces clear
an area of active shooters. If you have a gut feeling that compels you to take action against a shooter, then do it. It may be a stark do-or-die choice. I’ll help you with the task.
Male or female, heroes and heroines come in all shapes and sizes. Their qualities may be found in