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P R O D U
C T
B R E A K D O W N |
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What's
In Your... Bag? |
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By:
Frank Borelli, 25 March 2005
I've read
numerous articles in the
past about what a cop should
carry in his "fanny pack".
I've read online forum board
discussions about what cops
carry off-duty and what they
should carry off-duty. I've
written two articles about
inventorying your equipment:
one aimed at cops, and one
aimed at soldiers. Now I
take on the task of trying
to figure out what civilians
should carry under varying
circumstances. I've
considered this at some
length and have come to the
conclusion that only
emergency circumstances
would justify the immediate
need to have a bag of
equipment and/or supplies
ready to go. Most often, in
my past, I've applied
familiar emergency
circumstances to that need:
a call-out to go serve a
warrant; a hurricane that
has unexpectedly changed
course and is headed toward
home; the sound of glass
breaking at night that needs
immediate investigation.
Then it hit me: two of those
very situations can be
applied to anyone. Within
the past few months I can
point out weather conditions
that caused emergency
evacuations: mudslides in
California and wild fires in
Arizona. So, with that said,
let's get down to it: What
should you have packed,
ready to go, in what kind of
bag, duffle or backpack
under various conditions?
I've come up with three
different types of bags that
I feel meet most
requirements. The first two,
Immediate Response and Bug
Out, are probably the most
necessary and common across
the United States - and in a
whole lot of other places.
The third one - a Battle Bag
- is (unfortunately)
probably not a bad idea in
some places in the United
States; would be common for
cops on call; and would be a
good idea for those who can
afford it in the, ah, more
public-safety-challenged
countries of the world.
I will recommend contents
for those three types of
bags, and give brief
justifications for why I
make those recommendations.
The
Immediate Response Bag
The Bugout Bag
The
Battle Bag
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