 Shooting a weapon accurately can be difficult to begin with, but when you add deafening sirens, adrenaline, and a sergeant with a megaphone, it becomes a bit more stressful. For the 132nd Military Police Company from South Carolina, stressful situations are what they train for. Sergeant First Class Earl Williams put together a course based on the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy for the MPs at Camp Bonn-Steel Kosovo. Why are we here? I just decided to implement it to some of my guys that are not civilian cops. So it's a lot of moving and shooting. It's a lot of one-handed firing. It's a lot of standing shooting and a lot of kneeling shooting involved with this exercise today in this range. Specialist Kevin Blanton is an MP at Camp Bonn-Steel, but back home he's a supervisor at a company that makes electrical tools. He explains why this kind of stress shoot training is important. To be able to react fast to two different situations that may come up, if you need to pull your weapon out and fire to put a subject down, then you will be able to, you're trained to do that. Blanton is going to school to be a police officer back home and says this training will help him when he's ready for the academy. Reporting for the 121st Public Affairs Detachment, I'm Specialist Allison Pelleteer.