A piece of armor made for
the military is now in
Tulsa
and the Tulsa County
Sheriff’s Office is the only
law enforcement in the
nation to receive the heavy
duty crime-fighting
barricade.
The county says it received
a $36,600 grant from
Homeland Security to
purchase the barricade
equipment.
It’s called the FROMM RDB-54
Combat Rapid Deployment
Armored Barricade System.
The six barriers can spread
out to be 18 feet wide. It’s
made of metal strong enough
to ricochet rounds from an
AK-47 or explosives used in
the military.
FOX23’s Abbie Alford
explains how it can protect
law enforcement and you in a
dangerous situation.
The six barriers can spread
out to be 18 feet wide. It’s
made of metal strong enough
to ricochet rounds from an
AK-47 or explosives used in
military.
"After the first two
detonations the Marine Corp
said ,'you know this isn't
doing anything we might want
to try thirty,'" says
Captain Chuck Jordan.
Captain Jordan, The TCSO
Special Operations Team
Commander, says the Tulsa
County Sheriff’s Office is
the only law enforcement in
the nation with this armor.
"A lot of what we do in the
county is in rural areas and
sometimes we have a
farmhouse that there is no
cover for a quarter mile and
we have to get up there and
negotiate with the man or
woman to get them out," says
Jordan.
Or the tool can be used in
critical situations
when confronting a suspect
at a house with eight pipe
bombs inside or serving a
child molestation warrant.
"This provides the officer,
the deputy, the ability to
take his cover with him,"
says
Jordan.
Weighing 500 pounds the
barriers can stop a lot more
than bullets.
"It will also stop a five
thousand pound vehicle at a
speed of 30 miles per hour,"
says TCSO Sgt. Shannon
Clark.
Sergeant Clark says the
portable barriers will come
in handy at vehicle
checkpoints.
"There is always that high
potential that someone could
maybe not see the lights,
maybe not want to stop for
us and this would be able to
supply for security and
safety for the officers and
the citizens that they are
talking to," says Clark.
Captain
Jordan
says the next step is
getting the team trained
with the new equipment.
"It's a tool for our toolbox
and we are going to have to
learn how to use it," says
Jordan.
The TCSO also says the
barricades can also be used
to for crowd control at the
Tulsa State Fair.
Reported by, FOX23’s Abbie
Alford