I don't know if you are familiar with the berm layout out there as I have yet to see you there even just to visit and check the place out. ( )

But long story short:

We had a guy working on the BACK SIDE of the uber-massive berm at the end of the 200 yard range. He was a full ten feet below the top of the berm.

We get a call on the radio from him saying in essence 'someone is trying to kill me!' One of our guys takes off full tilt to the rifle range.

Upon arrival he discovers the shooter standing, shooting offhand at a target 20 yards away.

The numbnuts had 30 minutes earlier watched a video and completed a written test making it absolutely unconditionally clear that he knew that what he was doing was NOT ALLOWED (or even close to smart). "The bullets MUST impact the berm."

What he was doing was: shooting at a target he had set up on the 200 yard range about 20 yards in front of him. Guess what his bullets were doing? Yup. Striking the ground about 30 yards from him, and ricocheting . . . . everywhere. You know that once a rifle bullet is bent there IS NO predicting which way it will go, these were hitting the top of the 200 yard berm, flying completely over the 200 yard berm, we even found fresh impact marks (baby craters) in the sides of the range 50 yards from where he was standing.

And of course, he was not shooting slow controlled groups, he was doing magazine dumps with a poodle shooter.