LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock S11E104, Bad Guy Crossed The Threshold Of No Return When He Charged At An Officer! Mel Gibson finishes filming the 'Resurrection of the Christ.' Bad guy crossed the threshold of no return when he charged at an officer. Sheriff ousted by opponent for refusing to work with ICE. Man fatally shot during struggle with officers on video. Bad Guy Crossed the Threshold of No Return: Police Shootings, Mel Gibson’s Resurrection Film, ICE Cooperation, and Tactical Lessons Mel Gibson’s Resurrection Film and the Bible Discussion This episode of LEO Round Table opens with host Chip DeBlock welcoming panelists Dr. Joel Shults and Chief Ralph Ornelas before previewing a set of law-enforcement and public-safety stories. The first discussion departs from typical police topics to cover an article about Mel Gibson finishing filming The Resurrection of the Christ, a sequel to The Passion of the Christ. Chip reflects on the emotional impact of The Passion of the Christ and why the resurrection story is central to Christianity. Dr. Shults says he hopes the movie drives people back to Scripture rather than treating artistic films as Scripture itself, while Ralph shares a personal memory of meeting Mel Gibson and comments on Gibson’s faith, imperfections, and support for Robert Downey Jr. Greensboro Shooting and the Threshold of No Return The first major tactical case focuses on a Greensboro police shooting from August 2025 involving a trespass suspect who refused commands, moved toward a shed, obtained a weapon, dropped it, mounted a bicycle, then picked up a pipe wrench and advanced toward the officer. Chip describes the encounter as beginning with a misdemeanor trespass call but escalating when the suspect ignored orders and armed himself. The panel notes that the officer was justified in the shooting, but they also examine several tactical moments that might have changed the outcome. These include the officer’s attempt to conduct a weapons pat-down, the suspect’s movement toward the shed, the officer’s use of radio while the suspect advanced, and a possible missed opportunity to take the suspect down while he was straddling the bicycle. Tactical Lessons on Control, Timing, and Force Options Ralph and Joel use the Greensboro incident to discuss training points for officers. Ralph emphasizes coordination with a partner, going hands-on before allowing a suspect to reach a dangerous area, and considering impact weapons such as an expandable baton or PR-24 as alternatives that may prevent a situation from escalating to deadly force. Joel says the officer may have been delaying contact while waiting for backup and notes that public scrutiny, body cameras, and uncertainty can make officers hesitate to make early physical arrests. The panel agrees that officers must know whether they are having a conversation, conducting an investigation, intervening in criminal activity, or making an arrest, because that objective shapes the level of action required. Alabama Sheriff Race and ICE Cooperation The next story turns to Lee County, Alabama, where longtime Sheriff Jay Jones lost a Republican primary to former deputy Cameron “Cam” Hunt. Chip explains that the race centered heavily on immigration enforcement and whether the sheriff’s office should participate in the federal 287(g) program, which allows trained local law-enforcement officers to perform certain immigration-enforcement duties under ICE supervision. Joel says the incumbent’s position may have been more nuanced if his office already cooperated with ICE without a formal agreement, but he also observes that national politics, especially support for Donald Trump, is increasingly shaping local races. Ralph draws on his experience with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and argues that cooperation with ICE can be handled cleanly when agencies do their jobs without politicizing the process. Sheriffs, Local Accountability, and National Political Tensions The Alabama story leads the panel into a broader discussion of sheriffs, local elections, political polarization, and the role of national figures in local government. Chip praises aspects of Trump’s approach to personnel, saying he respects decisions based on beliefs and actions rather than party labels, and cites Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as an example. Ralph comments on Kennedy’s personal transformation and public-health focus, while Joel says he remains concerned about divisiveness but strongly supports the democratic electoral process and the office of sheriff. Ralph adds that some jurisdictions have taken steps to weaken sheriff independence, including a Los Angeles County charter change that allows the board of supervisors to remove a sheriff under certain circumstances. Illinois State Police Shooting and the Importance of Seeing the Hands The final major segment reviews Illinois State Police video from a fatal Woodlawn shooting involving Hollin Carpenter during a domestic-violence-related response. Chip describes how troopers approached Carpenter, asked whether he had weapons, and began struggling with him after he failed to cooperate. Body-camera and surveillance footage showed Carpenter with a gun, and the gun reportedly went off during the struggle before both troopers fired. Ralph credits the troopers for quickly identifying the gun, trying to contain it, creating distance, and using coordinated deadly force during a close-quarter engagement. Joel stresses the familiar law-enforcement principle that officers must see and control the hands, while Chip criticizes the suspect’s family narrative portraying Carpenter as a “good kid” despite his adult age, electronic monitoring status, and alleged armed resistance.
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