Cop Restrains Bigger Suspect With Jiujitsu Armbar, no need for strikes or bullets

2 years ago
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Las Vegas POLICE Officer Uses JIU-JITSU to Control Larger Suspect (Gracie Breakdown). More from Gracie Breakdown here- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNMZWa1QP42jHrmmzayFEeg
MMA Comes to the Police. Can mixed martial arts training make police officers less dangerous? This Footage was taken from a surveillance camera at an apparel store, showing a Gracie BJJ student, a police officer, threatening to break another man’s arm. The officer claimed he’d seen the man pocket a pair of expensive sunglasses. As the man attempted to leave the store, the officer intervened and, after a short struggle, they wound up going to the ground. With calm precision, the officer trapped the suspect in an armbar and waited for backup to arrive. “He held that position for over a minute,” Rener Gracie points out how his student torqued the other man’s elbow joint backward against his hips, hyper extending it just enough to stop the suspect from struggling but not so much that the tendons and muscle tissue holding the joint together tore away from the bone.

Gracie teaches moves like this one, adapted from the “gentle art” of Brazilian jiujitsu, to officers who pay $995 for a five-day Gracie Survival Tactics seminar. The idea is to train law enforcement officials to handle resistance using martial arts techniques that at once protect civilians from excessive uses of force and help officers fight off unforeseen threats. Officers who take Gracie’s class, the sales pitch goes, won’t panic at the first sign of conflict and will be less likely to pull their guns. As a consequence, they won’t make the kinds of mistakes that cost people their lives.

Brazilian jiujitsu has developed over the last 100 years. It was popularized by Rener’s grandfather Hélio Gracie and brought to the United States in the 1970s by Rener’s father Rorion, who settled in Southern California and supported himself working as a house cleaner, construction worker, and stunt coordinator until he’d hustled up enough money to open a gym. In the years since, Gracie-certified jiujitsu gyms have opened all over the world, with outlets everywhere from Minot, North Dakota, to Makati City, Philippines. The family-run business has also expanded to offer specialized programs for kids dealing with bullies and women’s self-defense, in addition to selling training books, DVDs, Gracie-branded apparel, and even juicers.

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