Pelvic Shooting, the Best Worst Option

kpdarnell

Newbie
I took my very first firearms class in 1992 from Louis Awerbuck.

He referred to the pelvic shot as "taking their transmission out".

It was taught as shots to be taken if nothing else was available/working and he stressed that all it would (hopefully) do is anchor the bad guy in one spot. The threat was still real and the fight wasn't over. You just might have limited their mobility.
 

Rick4673

Amateur
The article didn't directly address what I would really like to know, which is how well can pistol bullets "take their transmission out?" The article implies that pistol bullets probably aren't very good at damaging a human pelvis enough to put a guy down, but it seemed speculative.

If I am shooting a someone because he is wielding a contact weapon, the pelvis seems like an excellent first choice, IF pistol bullets will reliably do enough damage to take away his mobility.

Many of us here have probably put rifle bullets through both shoulders of people-sized critters, sacrificing a couple of meals to make sure said critter didn't make into a near-by thicket while bleeding out from a heart/lung shot.

It's one thing to do that with a rifle bullet, or a hardcast .44 magnum bullet, another with a 9mm, though. I just don't know.
 

Fatboy

Established
Pelvic shots are all well and good if you remember what the pelvis actually looks like and shoot accordingly. That big open gap below the pubic bone that runs all the way through won't stop anyone's mobility. Hitting them in the crest of the hip where the ball and socket joint actually is on the other hand could work.

It goes back to shooting at very small moving targets- if that is what you have to do to win, then why not shoot them in the face and anchor them in place that way?
 

Arete

Regular Member
Doc GKR has posted what Dr. Fackler has to say on this previously and elsewhere.



Fackler ML: "Shots to the Pelvic Area". Wound Ballistics Review. 4(1):13; 1999.

“I welcome the chance to refute the belief that the pelvic area is a reasonable target during a gunfight. I can find no evidence or valid rationale for intentionally targeting the pelvic area in a gunfight. The reasons against, however, are many. They include:

-- From the belt line to the top of the head, the areas most likely to rapidly incapacitate the person hit are concentrated in or near the midline. In the pelvis, however, the blood vessels are located to each side, having diverged from the midline, as the aorta and inferior vena cava divide at about the level of the navel. Additionally, the target that, when struck, is the most likely to cause rapid and reliable incapacitation, the spinal cord located in the midline of the abdomen, thorax and neck), ends well above the navel and is not a target in the pelvis.
-- The pelvic branches of the aorta and inferior vena cava are more difficult to hit than their parent vessels -- they are smaller targets, and they diverge laterally from the midline (getting farther from it as they descend). Even if hit, each carry far less blood than the larger vessels from which they originated. Thus, even if one of these branches in the pelvis is hit, incapacitation from blood loss must necessarily be slower than from a major vessel hit higher up in the torso.
-- Other than soft tissue structures not essential to continuing the gunfight (loops of bowel, bladder) the most likely thing to be struck by shots to the pelvis would be bone. The ilium is a large flat bone that forms most of the back wall of the pelvis. The problem is that handgun bullets that hit it would not break the bone but only make a small hole in passing through it: this would do nothing to destroy bony support of the pelvic girdle. The pelvic girdle is essentially a circle: to disrupt its structure significantly would require breaking it in two places. Only a shot that disrupted the neck or upper portion of the shaft of the femur would be likely to disrupt bony support enough to cause the person hit to fall. This is a small and highly unlikely target: the aim point to hit it would be a mystery to those without medical training — and to most of those with medical training.

The “theory” stated in the question postulates that “certain autonomic responses the body undergoes during periods of stress” causes officers to shoot low, and that apparently this is good in a gunfight because such shots cause “severe disability.” I hope that the points presented above debunk the second part of the theory. As for the “autonomic responses” that cause officers to shoot low, I am unaware of anything in the anatomy or physiology of the autonomic nervous system that would even suggest such an occurrence. Most laymen do not understand the function of the autonomic nervous system. It is simply a system whose main function is to fine tune the glands and smooth muscles (those in the walls of organs and blood vessels) of the body. During times of stress such as perceived impending danger, the autonomic nervous system diverts blood from the intestines and digestive organs to the skeletal muscles — in the so-called “fight or flight” response. The effects of this response are constantly exaggerated by laymen who lack an adequate understanding of it — most notably by gun writ-ers eager to impress their readers. Interestingly, the human body can get along quite well without major parts of the autonomic nervous system. During my professional life as a surgeon, myself and colleagues removed parts of thousands of vagus nerves (mostly in treating peptic ulcer disease) -- thus depriving the patient of the major part of the parasympathetic half of the autonomic nervous system. We also removed many ganglia from the sympathetic half of the auto-nomic nervous system, in treating such things as profusely excess sweating and various problems caused by spasm of the arteries. I am unaware of any evidence that these operations produced any significant effect on the future capacity of these patients to react appropriately in times of impending danger.

Unfortunately, the pelvis shot fallacy is common. This fallacy, along with other misinformation, is promoted constantly by at least one gun writer who is widely published in the popular gun press. Because of this, I regularly debunk this fallacy by including some of the above rationale in my presentations to law enforcement firearm instructor groups.”
 
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