Police Department Thinks 'Two Bullet Limit' Will Prevent Questionable Shootings
from the you-now-have-two-shots-to-de-escalate-the-situation dept
Two months ago, five San Francisco police officers surrounded a man armed with a knife and shot him 21 times. In response, the police department has introduced reforms meant to keep this sort of "interaction" to a minimum in the future. On the positive side, the reform efforts include training that will hopefully lead to fewer tense situations being resolved by officers emptying their weapons in the direction of their target.
Recruits must attend two-hour classes on de-escalation tactics, which teach how to deal with people in crisis, consider proportional force options, respect the sanctity of life and slow down incidents when possible.This is undercut, however, by a new policy so completely asinine even I'm against it, despite my theoretical ownership of timcushinghatescops.com.
New pistol training guidelines require police recruits to hear the command "threat" before they fire at targets, to shoot only two rounds at a time, and to stop and reassess threats after every two shots.In what is likely to be referred to as the "Barney Fife Rule," officers will only be allowed to shoot two bullets at a time, no matter what the situation is.
In some cases, this won't be enough bullets. In far too many cases, this will still be too many bullets. The push towards de-escalation is undermined by a permission slip that says two (2) bullets may be fired per officer (at minimum) even if the situation would be better served by the methods discussed in the mandatory training session officers slept through/mocked/interrupted with logical questions like "the hell is this two-bullet limit?"
In the case of Mario Woods -- who was shot 21 times by five officers -- he'd have only been killed by ten bullets. I suppose this is how the SFPD has chosen to interpret "less-lethal force." On the plus side, surrounding homes/citizens are far less likely to be the recipients of wayward bullets. And it will definitely make it very difficult for any officers pulling a "Brelo" to explain why they unloaded 49 bullets in 30 seconds at a suspect from point-blank range.
What the rule does, unfortunately, is make it more dangerous to be a police officer. In exchange, it does nearly nothing to lessen the danger of being a citizen. Lose-lose. The correct response would be to throw the entire weight of the PD's upper echelon behind de-escalation training.
A two-hour class officers are forced to attend won't make the message stick. What will make it stick are rules that make it explicitly clear that lethal force is a last resort -- something that should be used only very rarely. Any shooting should be accompanied by a raft of paperwork and a full investigation, overseen by an independent review team. The "shoot first and shoot often" mentality is only partly addressed by the two-bullet limit, which itself is illogical, unworkable and -- at worst -- a guaranteed way to avoid additional scrutiny for questionable shootings. After all, if only two bullets were used (and it only takes one to kill/maim someone), then it's a by-the-book shooting that warrants no further examination.
If nothing else, the fact that the policy can so readily be linked to an incompetent law enforcement officer depicted in a Golden Era TV show should have been enough to deter the SFPD from moving forward with the initiative. It should have limited itself to altering the mindset of its officers, rather than giving them a two-bullet "out" that undercuts the department's "will this do?" approach to de-escalation.
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Filed Under: de-escalation, police brutality, police violence, san francisco, sfpd, training, two bullets
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One Solution and the Only Solution
Mere replacement of every cop will not suffice, as the system will just enable the same result over time.
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Re: One Solution and the Only Solution
it is natural for government to flow towards tyranny, and it is only through eternal vigilance that we may combat that. Today there is no vigilance from the people, we instead sit around bickering about politics and running in fear from terrorism giving up our liberty.
Most of us have even reasoned with ourselves to stop using Jury Nullification or even talking about the concept.
Many of us have reasoned that we should give up our weapons so that we can be kept cattle by the police and state.
There is a time where things have to be torn down and built back from the ground up and this is one of those times.
If the DOJ wanted to get serious about it, they could easily solve the problem but we all know they are not going to do that, they are just going to run their mouths and puff up their chests here and there and then go home for a lil nap acting like they performed some public service.
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Re: One Solution and the Only Solution
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Two bullets or three max for a Mogadishu shot.
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Clap clap
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I'm not exactly sure who will be saying the word "threat". Maybe I'm not understanding this correctly. Is it saying that a new officer has to hear the word 'threat' from a more senior officer before shooting? What if they are really in danger and there is no one to say the word 'threat' on time?
Or is it a potential victim that must say the word 'threat'? Then there should be training to ensure that the police officer can assess if there really is a threat or if a civilian is just using the word arbitrarily or maybe mistakenly. You don't want the word 'threat' to be responded to with an instinctive fire. What about an officer that needs to defend themselves?
"The push towards de-escalation is undermined by a permission slip that says two (2) bullets may be fired per officer (at minimum) even if the situation would be better served by the methods discussed in the mandatory training session officers slept through/mocked/interrupted with logical questions like "the hell is this two-bullet limit?""
That's not how I read that. The rules don't seem to be giving officers special permissions to shoot that they didn't previously have. The rules seem to be encouraging officers to avoid shooting when possible but to limit their shots as much as possible when necessary.
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Order could be important
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Well if you can only have two shots...
The article does mention that the two bullet rule and the two hour training are for recruits, implying that more experienced officers may still fire freely and without the constraints of de-escalation tactics clouding their judgement.
I'm assuming this is aka target practice, even if that's the opposite of the stated purpose.
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The lack of foresight is astounding. Is there such a thing as negligent asininity?
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I think that's exactly it. If someone is going to be killed by police, they don't want it to be reported that they were shot 49 times.
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Me? Depressed? (you betcha)
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Re: Me? Depressed? (you betcha)
Stop insulting armies, that was a disorganised mob, lacking any tactical control or co-ordination, they were lucky that there was a building there to stop the forming a ring and shooting at each other.
The US police habit of having every cop in the area rush in to join the pack, is one of the things that increase the risks to everybody involved, especially when many of them are screaming orders at a suspect, and there are no rules to decide who is in charge.
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Graphs Charts?
I suspect it went something like: Grab butt, pull out number.
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There has got to be more specifics than that, right? I means what is an assessment in this case? Can the brave hero cop say he was reassessing in a matter of nanoseconds with his razor sharp wit while rapidly turning some kid into a super shrapnel showcase?
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Who is up for playing a little dodge bullet...
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The Good Old Days
It's not because things are more dangerous. All stats show the opposite. It's never been safer to be a cop.
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Re: The Good Old Days
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Scott Greenfield wrote about this this morning...
http://blog.simplejustice.us/2016/02/19/fools-have-rules-the-two-shot-rule/
E
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policy to shoot first reimplemented
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That having been said, the combat stress reaction will likely result in most officers yanking the trigger until slide lock. That's usually what happens now, even though the failure drill is currently what is trained. Quite simply, police are not trained enough to ingrain the current doctrine deeply enough to execute while under the influence of the combat stress reaction.
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The issue is when they shoot...
The bigger issue is that this shouldn't have anything to do with when a cop shoots a gun. This should be extremely rare.
Cops -- at all levels -- are that they have to take risks. They can't expect to use overwhelming force to prevent any risk to officer safety They don't get to use, or even pull, a gun because there might be a risk ahead. This means more cops will get killed on the job. Not many. Maybe a dozen more a year (average yearly is about 50 right now). Too bad. That's what protect and serve means.
Second, cops will have to lose the occasional fight. If the choice is having a cop take a punch and letting someone get away or keep escalating the level of force, right now every cop in this country will escalate. That's the wrong choice.
Of course they should also stop abusing, framing, and murdering people, but one thing at a time.
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Gimmie...
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Lethal Force As A Last Resort??
When the conscious brain turns off, the subconscious reflexes kick in. And conditioned by years of exposure to the products of your own country’s—nay, the world’s—number one propaganda industry, there is only one way you will respond.
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"OMG, he's threatening me!"
*shoot* *shoot*
"...Hm. Is he dead? He isn't?"
*shoot* *shoot*
"Welp, he should be dead by now. Time to move onto the next one."
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Hmmm...
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Spiral to the bottom
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Boooo!
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