Texarkana Gazette

‘We are serious about training. Very serious.’

Texas-side police begin teaching their brothers in blue from around the region

- By Karl Richter

Texarkana, Texas, Police Department had a clear message for city officials visiting from across the region Thursday. “We are serious about training. Very serious,” Lt. Shawn Fitzgerald told a meeting of the East Texas City Managers Associatio­n at TTPD’s Special Operations and Training Center.

“I hope you understand that what we’re doing here is not a fly-by-night operation. What we’re doing here, we’re trying to serve our brothers in

blue. We want to be the best,” he said.

Mayor Bob Bruggeman, City Manager John Whitson, Police Chief Dan Shiner and others welcomed city managers and law enforcemen­t leaders from more than 15 East Texas cities. They came from as far away as Bullard and Carthage to hear Fitzgerald’s presentati­on on TTPD’s new role in training fellow officers.

Last November, the Texas Commission on Law Enforcemen­t designated TTPD as an official training provider. The department’s 24 qualified instructor­s now can give officers the training they need to maintain their licenses and achieve proficienc­y certi-

fications. TTPD also will offer specialize­d classes, including advanced interview techniques, fraud investigat­ion and SWAT schools.

A full schedule of courses is under way, with more to come. “We have training scheduled every month for the next six months. And that’s not going to stop,” Fitzgerald said.

He emphasized the department’s scheduling flexibilit­y and broad variety of training topics, from field sobriety testing to forensic data recovery to possibly the most important— defensive tactics.

“Our use of force last year doubled. Now I’m not saying we laid hands on them, because we carry those JPX Cobra pepperball guns, but our use of force reports we had doubled. There’s a problem. I don’t know if you’re seeing it, but we’re seeing it,” Fitzgerald said.

“They’re testing us. They’re getting more and more to the point that they’re not going to submit to our will. And so defensive tactics, I would argue, is probably one of the most important up-and-coming courses that everybody needs training in.”

He also spotlighte­d a growing need for mobile field force, or riot control, training.

“We’re one call away from the poop hitting the fan. And it’s not your local residents generally you have to worry about. It’s the folks coming in from out of town, the profession­al organizers,” he said. Patrol Lt. Brannon Robertson of White Oak Police Department welcomed having an alternativ­e training choice.

“It gives us another option for getting training we may not be able to get somewhere else,” he said.

After the presentati­on, guests were invited to tour the Training Center and try out its Laser Shot digital shooting simulator, which is used to provide firearms training without expending ammunition.

On Twitter: @RealKarlRi­chter

 ?? Staff photo by Jerry Habraken ?? n Nash Police Chief Kelly Dial runs through a school-shooter simulation using the Texarkana, Texas, Police Department’s Laser Shot System Thursday at the TTPD Training Building. TTPD welcomed city managers and law enforcemen­t members from East Texas to...
Staff photo by Jerry Habraken n Nash Police Chief Kelly Dial runs through a school-shooter simulation using the Texarkana, Texas, Police Department’s Laser Shot System Thursday at the TTPD Training Building. TTPD welcomed city managers and law enforcemen­t members from East Texas to...

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