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June
26, 2007
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Table
of Contents:
I. Florida officer proves that
trusting your own instincts is one of the keys to officer
survival
II. Upcoming Street Survival
Seminars

By Dave
Smith Lead Street
Survival Seminar Instructor
On June 21, 2007
25-year-old Detective Jeff Bates, a five year veteran of the Broward
County, FL Sheriff's Office was on patrol in an unmarked car when he
saw William Sherman, age 46, walking down the street. Detective
Bates, a member of BSO's Selective Enforcement Team, was wearing
black pants and a shirt emblazoned with the word "SHERIFF" on it. He
observed Sherman, whom he thought looked "suspicious," as he walked
down the street, and decided to exit his vehicle and speak with him.
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As a department
spokesman told the press: "This
is something cops do all the time... it's just in their mind that if
they see someone out of place they stop and have a chat with
them." Detective Bates, who's suspicions about Sherman
were correct, had the presence of mind to call for back up before encountering Sherman,
who stabbed the detective in the thigh with a steak knife shortly
after the encounter began.
Sherman, who lives only
a block from where the encounter took place, didn't get far. Just
after Bates was injured, his back up arrived on the scene, took
control of Sherman, and found two more knives
in his possession. Sherman is awaiting charges and
Detective Bates was treated and released the same night.
What's
wrong with this picture?
What is it that triggers
our "suspicion" of an individual? One researcher found that often,
powerful "hunches" or intuitive actions were not only based on what
we observe that is present, but also those things that are absent. Perhaps the hardest
thing to explain in a report is what was the "thing" that made us
approach a subject. This is especially difficult when the there was,
in fact, not a thing but an "absence," something that is missing or
an action that should have occurred but didn't.
Detective Bates not only
felt the need to interview the eventual assailant, but also to call
for backup. Over and over we are advised to trust our instincts, but
science has been slow to explain or even study the phenomena of
human "instincts." Many scientists have claimed for decades that we
are born as blank slates and are totally a product of environment.
Now, we are finding that humans have an abundance of preloaded
software for survival and we need to learn to develop those
instincts instead of deny them.
Passing
the "smell test"
The old saying "it just
didn't pass the smell test" is truer than we thought with the
discovery that humans have similar organs to other animals for such
things as evaluating odor. We know dogs that can smell fear, but we
now know that we can too. Our Jacobson's Organ is a chemosensory organ that
evaluates what we smell. Have you noticed all the additives they are
adding to your cologne to make you (hopefully) more attractive to
whoever you are trying to attract? When humans perspire, we have two
types of sweat, eccrine and apocrine; one simply cools while the
other is released by fear or anxiety and smells to the world "I am
afraid."
Interpreting
the non-verbals
Kinesics, the scientific
study of body language, was pioneered by the anthropologist Ray L.
Birdwhistell, who wrote Introduction to Kinesics in
1952, but it took law enforcement awhile to catch on. A person's
body language expresses emotions, feelings, attitudes, even pending
behavior, and a subject's body language often contradicts the
messages conveyed by their verbal responses. As we talk about in the
Street
Survival Seminar a subject may be expressing cooperation
verbally while exhibiting such behavior as shifting into a fighting
stance, clenching the jaw, "target-glancing" you or one of your
tools (such as your firearm), hiding their hands, or any of a
hundred other "pre-attack postures" that humans may display before
attacking.
Many of these behaviors
we intuitively sense as signals to us, but routine
desensitizes us to the possibility of the more important threats
that maybe being indicated. Detective Bates obviously was wise
enough to ask for backup based on some set of signals he observed
from the subject. Remember, what someone doesn't do can be a
more important indicator than what they do when evaluating them. One
of the best drug seizure patrol officers I ever met made the
majority of his arrests on the suspect's failure to "check him out"
as they passed each other.
Often, the hard part for
you when you have acted on a "feeling" was bringing those
unconscious cues you received up to the conscious level so you could
record them in your reports! The important thing is to remember to
trust those "ESP-like" moments. In fact, in studying ESP researchers
were amazed to find that many times it was simply the remarkable
capacity of the human mind to pick out the smallest cues present or
absent and prick the consciousness with a sense of warning.
The most important
lesson is to never stop trusting your "spidey sense" and if you are
an FTO reinforce the need in new crime fighters to learn to look at
every detail and look for cues!
References
Blink,
by Malcolm Gladwell Sources
of Power, by Gary Klein The
Gift of Fear, by Gavin De Becker
II.
Upcoming Street Survival Seminars
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Seminar Location |
Dates |
Details |
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Street
Survival Seminar Phoenix,AZ |
August 6-7,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Chicago,IL |
August 16-17,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Ann
Arbor/Detroit,MI |
September 5-6,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Seattle/Tacoma,WA |
September 13-14,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Pittsburgh,PA |
September 17-18,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Las
Cruces,NM |
October 8-9,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar San
Francisco,CA |
October 17-18,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Milwaukee,WI |
October 22-23,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Dallas/Ft
Worth,TX |
November 1-2,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar for WOMEN Atlantic
City,NJ |
November 5-6,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Las
Vegas,NV |
December 4-5,
2007 |
Detail
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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. |
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