Where in the world did he come up with line of malarkey? You can bet that that was one instructor that doesn't visit this forum. The instructor only has to record pass or fail so where would an opposing lawyer find out the score? I can understand where being known to be a lousy shot could get one in trouble with the lawyers.smyrna wrote: With that said, the instructor encouraged the good shooters to NOT score a perfect score. He said that if he ever ended up in court, he could honestly say that the person in question was not a perfect shot. Not sure if that would help in a defense or not but that's sure what he said.
Am I in trouble for winning amarksman competitions in the past? or scoring expert in the Army? How about a stray shot hitting the wrong person in defencive shooting and no record of ever going to the range.
Being good is not a bad thing.