|

|
|
June
19, 2007
|

Table
of Contents:
I. Behavior traits that get
cops killed; long known, still ignored
II. Upcoming Street Survival Seminars


Behavior
traits that get cops killed; long known, still
ignored
By PoliceOne Senior
Correspondent Chuck
Remsberg Sponsored by Blauer
Editor's
note: This article first appeared on PoliceOne.com. Because of its
life-saving importance, we are sending this to all Street Survival Newsline
members as well. Please take heed and stay
safe.

Fifteen years ago, after
an exhaustive five-year study of officer murders, a research team
from the FBI delivered a simple but compelling message: there are
certain behavioral characteristics that tend to get cops killed.
No single profile of
fated officers can be defined, the researchers cautioned, because
there are too many unpredictable variables in the "deadly mix" that
results in officer fatalities. But certain "general descriptors,"
treacherous specifics of a personal operating style, often appear to
be shared by officers who fall prey to the predators who cross their
paths.
All these traits can be
overcome or avoided if you approach the street with tactical
awareness. They've been widely publicized, for several years were
detailed in Calibre Press' Street
Survival Seminar, and have been repeatedly featured at law
enforcement training conferences.
Yet as we saw with the
recent slaying of a trusting, small-town police chief in Kentucky, the
potentially life-saving lessons inherent in the FBI's findings are
still being tragically ignored. [News
report]
The chief, a 22-year
veteran, handcuffed a DUI suspect in front instead of in back. It
was a courtesy he often indulged in with arrestees he knew, and he
had arrested this suspect numerous times; the offender considered
him "a family friend." Moments after the cuffing, authorities said,
the prisoner accessed a gun and shot the chief point blank in the
back of the head as they drove toward jail.
As the chief's name is
chiseled into the Memorial Wall, it seems fitting to once again
review what the FBI calls "Behavioral Descriptors for Victim
Officers." These were first identified in 1992 in the landmark study
Killed in the Line of
Duty, by the research team of Dr. Anthony Pinizzotto,
Edward Davis, and Charles Miller III. The researchers reiterated the
checklist in their recently released study of felonious assaults on
LEOs, Violent
Encounters.
Based on extensive
interviews with the victim officers' attackers, peers, and
supervisors, here are the traits the studies say are frequently
associated with officers who end up getting killed. The researchers
note in their latest report, "[O]fficers need not exhibit all of
these behavioral characteristics to place themselves as risk." [Read
Are
we breeding a police culture of "additional victims?"]
1.
Friendly.
This adjective was
frequently used to describe the murdered officers, along with
"well-liked," "laid back," and "easy going." While a friendly
demeanor "does much to promote a positive image for the officer and
the department, overly friendly behavior at an
inappropriate time" can backfire, the researchers warn. That
mind-set can lull you into a sense of complacency, lead to the
granting of dangerous favors or accommodations, and "might be
misinterpreted by an offender as potential weakness...a sign of
vulnerability."
A savvy officer knows
it's often useful to appear friendly as a conscious
strategy, but you "never should let down [your] guard, because no
one can know what is in the mind of another person." The subject
you're dealing with "may be contemplating [your] assault to effect
an escape."
2.
Service-oriented.
"Tends to perceive self
as more public relations than law enforcement," the researchers said
of the prototypical slain officer. Of course service is part of your
job. But on the street, your "customer" is not always right. To protect
and serve the community, the researchers remind, "officers must
realize that they need to protect themselves first" and not indulge
a "misguided sense of service" that results in "placing prisoners'
comfort over their own personal safety."
In policing, your
success-and your safety-often depend on your ability to get people
to do what they don't want to do.
3.
Hesitant about using force.
Victim officers tended
"to use less force than other officers felt they would use in
similar circumstances," the researchers found. And they customarily
"used force only as a last resort;" their peers said they themselves
"would use force at an earlier point in similar circumstances."
Courts have clearly
confirmed that it's justifiable in situations you reasonably
perceive as threatening to employ even pre-emptive force to stop a
threat; you don't have to wait until you are assaulted or injured.
Yet some trainers are noticing that some officers today seem so
hesitant about using force that it appears they are more afraid of
being sued or thought overzealous than they are of being murdered!
4.
Given to short-cutting.
Victim officers often
"failed to follow established procedures," the researchers report.
They ignored or sidestepped rules, "especially in regard to arrests,
confrontations with prisoners, traffic stops, and waiting for backup
when backup is available." Many times, this was linked to being a
hard worker, rather than being lazy or indifferent; the officer was
a top performer, driven to amass more arrests, snare more
commendations, get recognized with a plum assignment or other award.
Paradoxically, the
researchers state, rule-breakers often are rewarded after violating
procedures that are designed to protect them. Which, of course,
encourages more such behavior that can "endanger both the officers
and their partners."
5.
Trusting of "perceptual shorthand."
In other words, officers
who ended up dead often relied heavily on their perceived ability to
"read" people and situations. They depended on "a rapid or
abbreviated process" by which they analyzed environments and
subjects and, based on their quick perceptions or feel, "acted
accordingly." That often meant dropping their guard.
Commonly they were
optimists; they tended "to look for 'good' in others." When they saw
signs of cooperation, heard promises not to cause trouble, enjoyed a
prior history of non-violent contacts with a suspect, sensed they
had rapport, and the like, they tended to feel they were home free,
rather than maintaining a mind-set that stays open to subtle and
not-so-subtle shifts in every interaction.
Regrettably, the
research team points out, "victim officers' evaluations of offenders
often prove inaccurate." The murdered officers made themselves
vulnerable by failing "to recognize that their perception of an
incident can vary greatly from the offender's perception of what is
occurring" and what may occur before the contact is over.
From what we know, did
the professional personality of the unfortunate chief in Kentucky
reflect at least some of these don't-do traits?
Count the ways.
Then ask yourself to
what extent you
sometimes lapse into these same perilous behaviors because of
complacency, fatigue, impatience, inflated confidence, or pressures
of the moment.
And remember: The
important lessons of life-and death-tend to be repeated until
learned.
For
more articles by Chuck
Remsberg, visit his PoliceOne.com column, 10-8:
Life on the Line
II.
Upcoming Street Survival Seminars
|
Seminar Location |
Dates |
Details |
|
Street
Survival Seminar Clearwater/St. Pete
Beach,FL |
June 21-22,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Phoenix,AZ |
August 6-7,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Chicago,IL |
August 16-17,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Ann
Arbor/Detroit,MI |
September 5-6,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Seattle/Tacoma,WA |
September 13-14,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Pittsburgh,PA |
September 17-18,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Las
Cruces,NM |
October 8-9,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar San
Francisco,CA |
October 17-18,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Milwaukee,WI |
October 22-23,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Dallas/Ft
Worth,TX |
November 1-2,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar for WOMEN Atlantic
City,NJ |
November 5-6,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Las
Vegas,NV |
December 4-5,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Not
coming to your area? Please contact
Slavka Younger at
slavka.younger@praetoriangroup.com
to find out how you can bring Street Survival seminar to your
department. |
Help
us keep you safe. Send your story ideas and opinions, as well as
material for Weapons Warning and Concealment Gallery to Newsline.
Send e-mail to the editor: newsline@calibrepress.com
Return to top
Click here
for a printer friendly version of this
newsline
|