I don't know that someone attempting to commit a crime is always necessarily concerned with all of the logistics involved with committing that crime. For example, last Friday night (2/24) in Little Rock the LRPD cop that works as security at the Arkansas Revenue office located in a mid-size (but EXTREMELY) busy strip mall in a very busy area of Little Rock was jumped by three men as she exited the revenue office. The officer was in uniform and the robbers were attempting to steal the bank bags the officer was carrying out of the revenue office. The robbers had a gun, which was fired at the officer. The officer returned fire killing the man with the gun. The other two suspects fled and their abandoned vehicle was found up the road from where the robbery/shooting took place.
My point is, criminals clearly don't think about what they're doing a lot of the time. Who in their right mind would rob an officer in uniform, right outside a state government office, in the middle of a strip mall, in front of dozens of (if not over 100) witnesses, and countless video survellience cameras - not to mention the cars that passed by the scene as it occurred that had to have numbered anywhere from 150-200.
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