De-Escalation of Force and the Difference Between Resistance and Attack
Author: Benjamin J. Campos
Date Posted: March 24, 2009
The application of force is a topic covered throughout a police
officer's career. Training begins academically at the academy, followed
by practical "defensive tactics" and similar training. Recruits
and candidates are instructed on techniques and their appropriate
applications. However, as officers, we do not live in a text book,
and anyone who has ever worked on the street can tell you that situations
develop faster than most can recall data. It is important to highlight
that knowledge and skill of this arena are not solely gained at
the academy. There are many training programs, as well as books
and authors on the topic which help prepare an officer for his/her
tasks.
There are many situations in a police officer's responsibilities
that call for the responding officer to enter a situation low, and
escalate as necessary. For example, a domestic disturbance where
a husband and wife are verbally arguing might not be best solved
by walking in and shouting. If we walk in and begin to yell, where
do we go from there? A little verbal judo here might de-escalate
the situation.
Another topic to begin this article that must be discussed is the
difference between affecting an arrest of a resisting suspect, and
an attack on a police officer. The easiest way to break this down
is to ask the following: Is he trying to get away, or is he trying
to attack me? In the first, your force must be directed to affect
an arrest without injury to self, other officers, or innocent parties.
In the latter, you must save yourself. You must go home at the end
of the shift. You must win. You must counter attack.
Now how much force is reasonable? In attempting to affect an arrest,
the textbook answer would be the amount necessary to get the job
done. End of story. But how much force is reasonable when the resistor
turns on you. How much is necessary when the suspect takes that
swing, that kick, draws the weapon, or goes for yours?
This is not the time to decide if you have the capability in you
to cause serious bodily harm. That decision should be burned into
your mind from the moment you took that job. At the moment you feel
threatened, at the moment you feel the reality set in, you have
to already be engaged in battle. The appropriate response is to
be in "kill or be killed" mode, and begin your attack with the initial
intent to take it to the end if necessary. Here is where the title
of this article "de-escalation of force" comes into play.
In verbal judo, we enter low and steady and calm. At this point,
we can work up to where we need to be. When your life is on the
line, you must begin the fight at the top level. You must be in
kill mode and give nothing less than all the fight you have in you.
As I say this, you might be thinking that you cannot, or that it
is wrong to feel this way. But remember that we are all animals,
and possess instincts and capacity beyond education. And also remember
that this may be the call, this may be the fight that stops you
from going home at the end of your shift. The one that gets your
family a folded flag.
While applying all of the necessary physical, mechanical, or ultimately
lethal force during this encounter, the situation may change. As
this dynamic situation unfolds, the suspect may fight on, surrender,
or be rendered incapable of fighting further. At this point, you
may de-escalate if necessary, and keep the situation in the physical
force/mechanical force sector. But the mental preparedness to exert
lethal force must always be there, ready to emerge from your primitive
brain without conscious decision. You must fight with everything
you have, until you know that you are safe.
A good parallel to this is Firearm Training System (FATS) type
interactive training. A scenario may present an armed suspect (shoot),
who moments later drops the weapon (don't shoot). Specifics change,
and we must change with them. But one thing that remains the same,
is that we must be mentally prepared to go as far as necessary to
protect ourselves, or brother/sister officers, and the public.
This article proposes the polar opposite in handling physical attack
vs. many other types of disturbances. It is important to mentally
prepare for your job every day, and unfortunately in our chosen
career, you must mentally prepare to kill someone every single day.
*It should be noted that the ideas in this article are that of
the author, and do not represent explanation or interpretation of
law (state or federal). All information is for informative purposes
only, and students should seek legal guidance from their agency,
legal advisor, or classroom instructor regarding the application
of force.
About The Author
martial
arts Tampa, self
defense Tampa, mixed martial arts Tampa
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
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