BEVERLY - A camouflage-clad gunman walks backward out of a
school classroom and into Officer Terrence Pennington's line
of vision.
As wounded students lie in the hallway, Pennington takes aim
and fires four shots at the man.
Light immediately floods the room to reveal a wall-sized video
screen, and Pennington steps forward to inspect his
marksmanship.
Had this been a real-life situation, his target would be dead.
A virtual-reality simulator is giving police officers a chance
to practice more than 400 different real-life scenarios so
they are ready in a dangerous situation.
Last week, Lawrence's 16-member Emergency Response Team got to
test the simulator, concealed in a 48-foot mobile trailer.
"I loved it," said police Lt. Jim Raso, who directs
training for the team. "The benefit to that is using your own
weapon in the training."
"It's exposing us to shoot, no-shoot scenarios," police Lt.
Scott McNamara said. "Testing our decision-making."
The training trailer is owned by Blue Line Corp. of Beverly, a
business run by Paul Polonsky, an Ipswich police officer. The
trailer, which doubles as an inside shooting range, is used to
hone firearms skills. The trailer is reinforced with ballistic
steel so that the live ammunition the officers use can't
escape.
"We can shoot handguns; we can shoot machine guns; we can
shoot shotguns in here," Polonsky said.
Blue Line takes its training range to different police
departments, which the company says is more cost-effective
than sending officers on overtime to private firearms ranges.
Though it may look like a game, the training is not, police
say.
Each scenario the officer faces calls for a different
reaction.
On his second turn in the simulator, Pennington is confronted
by a visibly angry, rifle-wielding husband. The man is
standing at the top of a flight of stairs, refusing to come
down.
Pennington shoots him in the groin to disarm him, but not kill
him.
"Nice shot, Terry," McNamara says.
"He's going to come down the stairs now," Polonsky says.