Das ist eigentlich von a "spezielles taktisches Training" Veranstaltung in Krasnoperekopsk, bei der Sicherheitskräfte in drei Abteilungen lernten, Terroranschläge zu verhindern.

Der Polizist Daniel Z (27), der die Rolle eines Militanten spielte, versuchte, eine Zarya-2M-Blitzgranate zu ergattern, die von einem Mitarbeiter der russischen Garde geworfen worden war. Er versuchte zu klagen, indem er eine Untersuchung wegen grober Fahrlässigkeit einleitete, die jedoch nur sechs Monate später ohne Ergebnisse eingestellt wurde.



Von K-17-

20 Kommentare

  1. I love that when asked at the end of the vod „did you grabbed it or what?“ he said „no i turn around she were just there“

  2. SnackyMcGeeeeeeeee on

    This was training, he KNEW they used flashbacks, and he tried to fucking pick one up?

    Darwin says let him die.

  3. Highlander_16 on

    I’ve seen the uncensored version but didn’t realize it wasn’t a frag. Holy shit. Expedient Hand Removal Service.

  4. DomitiusAhenobarbus_ on

    I thought this was training when I first saw it – makes way more sense

  5. DornPTSDkink on

    I said this in the last thread:

    If a grenade lands next to you, the best possible thing you could do is be laid on the ground and let 99% of the shrapnel miss you, preferably your head in the opposite direction to the grenade like he was and being in the open is even better, the concussive force won’t do much except disorientate you a little *maybe*.

    The worst thing you could do is try to grab said grenade.

    The fact that this is a flashbang if even more stupid he grabbed it, not only because it’s not a danger to your life but because they generally have a shorter fuse time.

  6. Blufferflies on

    I thought he was pretty calm and the grenade blast was too little til I read the context.

  7. Date?

    On the plus side this may have saved his life from being deployed for ukrainian war

  8. RogueMallShinobi on

    Tbh I would get my hand blown off if it meant I didn’t have to serve as Russian infantry in this war

  9. meissoboredto on

    They can give him a hook to support his rifle while he fires with the other hand.
    He should be a LOT more careful as he dropped his “handheld” radio……..

  10. Both-Employment-5113 on

    still fake video, blurrying and addign some shitty watermark to hide the visible markers of it being fake is just a subhuman thing to do really.

  11. Gray-Sky556 on

    >Investigators opened a criminal case for causing grievous bodily harm through negligence, but six months later, they found no evidence of a crime and closed it. The key piece of evidence—the footage from Daniil’s helmet cam—was missing.

    Literally „Your hand loss is not service-related“

    I wonder if they ever found his hand? Or was it blown to smithereens?

  12. Translation from Baza Telegram channel

    >

    >A police officer in Crimea lost his arm during a training exercise when fellow law enforcement officers threw a grenade at him. He is now trying to bring those responsible to justice.

    >According to Baza, a „tactical training exercise“ was taking place in Krasnoperekopsk in late May: law enforcement officers from three agencies were learning to prevent terrorist attacks. The role of a simulated militant was played by 27-year-old police officer Daniil Z. A Rosgvardia officer threw a Zarya-2M flashbang grenade in his direction. It is typically used only against armed criminals and only at a distance of at least 2.5 meters. The officer instinctively grabbed the grenade to throw it further away. At that moment, an explosion occurred, severely injuring Daniil Z.

    >The training was immediately stopped, and the police officer was hospitalized. Doctors diagnosed him with a traumatic amputation of his left hand, second-degree burns, shrapnel wounds to his legs, feet, and face, and sensorineural hearing loss. An examination ruled his injuries constituted serious bodily harm.

    >Investigators opened a criminal case for causing grievous bodily harm through negligence, but six months later, they found no evidence of a crime and closed it. The key piece of evidence—the footage from Daniil’s helmet cam—was missing.

    >The Russian National Guard told Baza that an internal investigation confirmed that Daniil himself was to blame for the tragedy—he shouldn’t have picked up the grenade. The victim claims he wasn’t aware of the plan to use the grenades, had only a second to think, and that his actions were merely reflexive. However, just a minute before the incident, he himself had thrown an airsoft grenade toward his colleagues.

    >Now Daniil is trying to hold the security forces who threw the grenade at him accountable. He accuses them of criminal negligence, which led to his disability.

    >

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