Detective, patrol officer are this year’s Top Guns

Rasiang used a 3.9 inch Glock 23.40 caliber while second placer Sgt. Juan Rebuenog of the CPA police used a 3.9 inch Glock 19 pistol.Third place went to Sgt. Joe Palacios, also of CPA police.

Ogumoro successfully defended her title with the use of a 4-inch S&W semi-automatic phase, gliding through the pistol course undefeated.

Crime Stoppers Coordinator Tricia Seman placed second while PO2 Mary Lou Tanaka finished third.

CPA police Sgt. Melvin Manahane is this year’s winner for the fire arm instructors competition.

Manahane competed with eight other instructors, including FBI agent Jim Barry who placed second and Assistant Chief Jordan Kosam, who finished third.

For the team competition of the men’s division, CPA police headed by Sgt. Manahane, Sgt. Juan Rebuenog, Sgt. Joe Palacios and Kosam emerged as the winners, breaking their own record set last year.

Team CPA, the four-time Top Gun team champion, completed the confined shooting combat course in a new record time of 42 minutes and 11 seconds.

This included firing submachine gun at 50 yards, pistol barricade shooting at 15 yards, pistol barricade shooting at 15 yards, pistol prone position at 15 yards, and shotgun at 25 yards.

The DPS team of PO1 Peter Camacho, PO1 Roy Kaipat, PO2 Joey Cruz and PO2 Kevin Maratita placed second while Team DFW’s Juan Kapileo, Tony Mareham, Peter Teigita and Ray Cabrera finished third.

The top female team was the Clyde’s Angels of DPS, who set a record score of 21 out of 21 hits in 3 minutes and 38 seconds.

The team is composed of Seman, PO1 Melissa Bauleong, Tanaka, Ogumoro and P02 Catherine Pangelinan.

DPS spokeswoman Lei Ogumoro said there were 50 participants in this year’s competition from DPS, the Commonwealth Ports Authority, the Division of Fish and Wildlife, the Department of Corrections, the Division of Customs, the Federal Bureau of Investigations and the U.S. Navy.

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