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Thursday, October 7, 2021

Want to Avoid a Fight? Don’t Start One.

By Calibre Press | Oct 6, 2021


In Calibre Press’s best-selling book Street Survival II, authors Jim Glennon, Dan Marcou and Charles Remsberg share two pieces of advice that can help you avoid inciting an attack if that otherwise may have been avoided. In instances where an individual is absolutely determined to attack you, there may be little or nothing you can do to diffuse their violent intent. However, what you can do is develop the pre-attack detection skills Street Survival II includes and the popular Calibre Press course Spotting Pre-Assault Indicators teaches.

When it comes to deterrence, here’s what Glennon, Marcou and Remsberg have to say in SSII:

Don’t incite, provoke or inflame violent behavior. While there is virtually never an excuse for someone to resist or attack a police officer, as professionals we need to recognize that often our nonverbal and verbal behavior may incite violent emotions from the person with whom we are engaged. This can be simplified by saying it comes down to the way we treat the other person.

Again, this does not justify an attack, but police officers should be experts in dealing with the emotions of human beings. We’ll say that again. We need to be experts at dealing with human beings and their accompanying emotions.

A person who is angry at the outset, for whatever reason, must be recognized as a potential threat to the responding officer. Minimize antagonizing such a person; this should be obvious. However, police officers seem to ignore the fact that some words and behaviors are of a calming nature and others incite. “Why are you being such an asshole?” for example, would not be an appropriate opening when attempting to engage positively.

In the book Arresting Communication: Essential Interaction Skills for Law Enforcement, the art of developing rapport is addressed at length. It explains why rapport-building is a necessary ingredient in establishing a positive understanding and collaborative interaction. At the very least, officers should be aware of their approach and delivery.

Not making a bad situation worse by contributing to the negative emotions is a must. To do this, officers need to focus on their professional goal and not be diverted by personal emotions and values. Police officers should be proficient at reading body language and at developing the ability to consciously recognize the behavior, tone, words, etc. that indicate a person is experiencing unstable emotions.

Once that ability is established, an officer needs to know how to tailor his communication style to minimize someone’s emotional instability. He/she needs to communicate this recognition of the other person’s worth and value.

Deter violent behavior and intent. “I’m going to kick your ass, you motherfucker!” Every veteran police officer has encountered people using such language indicating violent intent. Some have heard this kind of vile rhetoric hundreds of times.

Contrary to media hype, most officers are very successful at calming the irrational and avoiding physical violence to control or defend against a subject. Officers do this by using the appropriate words, tone of voice, facial expressions and body language. Some officers are better than others and many are great at deterrence. However, this skill is acquired through both experience and education and each is dependent on the other.

Some officers seem to have an innate ability to size up others accurately as well as interact suitably for the situation in context. While experience is a great teacher, the skills can and need be acquired through studying as well.

Understanding body language, the paralinguistic (voice tone, inflection, rate of speech, amplitude, pitch, etc.), statement analysis, and the general reading of people, however, is not an exact science. This makes it difficult to teach in the formal, limited settings found in law enforcement training.

Balance is the key, but there is no specific balance point. There are no words you can definitively communicating effectively, everything is contextual. Too weak and you may encourage it to calm someone. No body language that always means a particular thing. When it comes to attack. Too authoritarian and you may do the same.

While we can’t describe the quintessential facial expression that conveys supreme confidence, we can definitively say that the ability to deter begins with recognizing the would-be aggressor’s intent and communicating that such behavior would be ill-advised.

Source: https://calibrepress.com/2021/10/want-to-avoid-a-fight-dont-start-one/?utm_source=Calibre+Press+Newsletter&utm_campaign=70dad98f45-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_02_11_06_49_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_dcd0c1c239-70dad98f45-177388209

Sunday, October 3, 2021

2021 Policing in America

Funny how the weak and worthless cowards criticize LE, but, ALWAYS from the sidelines…


 

Saturday, October 2, 2021

Philadelphia Security Officer Killed With Homemade Weapon

 PHILADELPHIA PA October 2 2021 - Police say a gunman who fatally shot a security guard with a homemade weapon at a Philadelphia office complex later surrendered to officers inside a third-floor social services agency.

 Authorities were called to Logan Plaza on the 5200 block of Old York Road around 11:30 a.m. Friday for reports of an active shooter inside an office building.

 Investigators say a man armed with a "homemade weapon" shot a security guard in the head then proceeded to Pathways to Housing PA's third floor office.

A Contact Team from the Philadelphia Police Department entered the building and found the alleged gunman who surrendered after being ordered to drop his weapon, Deputy Commissioner Ben Nash said.

 "Anybody that was inside of the building must have been scared for their lives," Nash told reporters.

 Arthur Francis, who was on the third floor when shots rang out, said he came face-to-face with the gunman. He said the suspect was "adamant" about finding someone who worked at the office.

 "I was like ‘what’s going on, man?' and the gunman was like ‘aw man, they ruined my life!’ that's all he said," Francis told FOX 29 News.

Authorities have not identified the gunman at this time.

 The security officer victim was later identified as 25-year-old Nassir Day.

 In a Facebook post, Pathways to Housing PA said the gunman was previously charged for making threats against staff members but had not been in contact with the agency in over 18 months.

 "We are both grateful that our staff and participants are safe and full of grief to learn that a victim of today's shooting has passed away," the agency wrote. "Our hearts go out to the victim's family."

Source: https://www.fox29.com/news/police-respond-to-incident-at-logan-office-building

Thursday, September 30, 2021

VT City That Defunded Police Now Paying Officers to Stay

September 30, 2021 • by POL Staff

Last June, a resolution was drawn up by the Burlington, VT, City Council to "address racial disparities in police interactions," declare racism a citywide crisis, and create more opportunities for residents of color. To fund the resolution's goals, the city set a new cap for the number of officers in the department at 74—30 percent lower than the previous one—and aimed to repurpose the money saved from the trim and hiring freeze for alternative responses to 911 calls, like unarmed social workers. Now the city is trying to pay its officers to stay.

In the 14 months since, the Burlington Police Department has dropped from around 90 officers, when the resolution was passed, to under 70 today. This is largely thanks, officials say, to cops leaving for higher-paying jobs in other departments or retiring earlier than expected. Kelly Devine, the longtime executive director of the Burlington business association, says she’s spoken to many disaffected cops herself, suggested some left town because of increased scrutiny on the department even as they faced greater workloads.

“Most of it was, ‘I gotta get out of here,’” she told The Daily Beast.

“It has led to a lot of backlash and outcry in the community for more police,” Jack Hanson, a progressive City Council member in Burlington, told The Daily Beast.

For her part, Devine told The Daily Beast, she’s convinced increased local concern about safety and crime in the normally tranquil oasis has a basis in reality, and specifically the city’s decision to defund the police.

The same Council that voted to defund its police voted unanimously on Monday to give nearly $1 million in federal COVID-19 relief funds to the police department and effectively write each remaining officer a $10,000 check to stay on the job.

Source: https://www.policemag.com/619830/vt-city-that-defunded-police-now-paying-officers-to-stay?utm_source=email&utm_medium=enewsletter&utm_campaign=20210930-nl-pol-ontarget-bobcd210924003&omdt=nl-pol-ontarget&omid=1004349715&utm_content=01&tracking_number=bobcd210924003&oly_enc_id=4125f1769401e0y