The Columbus Dispatch

Police seek de-escalation training

Officers say the sessions are already saving lives

- David Sharp

SACO, Maine – Angry over being fired, a former employee slashed the tires of his boss’ vehicle and still held the knife when police officers arrived.

Three officers positioned themselves at a safe distance as the man yelled and ranted. One officer had a stun gun, another a handgun.

The third used the most important tool – a willingnes­s to talk.

Here in a school parking lot in Maine, the emergency was fake, but the strategies were very real. The officers were going through a training course offered by the Police Executive Research Forum that thousands of police officers around the country are receiving this year. Officers are taught: keep a safe distance, slow things down.

The organizati­on based in Washington, D.C., is the foremost policing think tank in the country. Its two-day training now has a long waiting list.

“The most common mistake is rushing a situation that you don’t need to rush,” said Steven Stefanakos of New York City Police Department, who was brought in to help train the officers. “When you compress time and space, it usually does not go the way we want it to go.”

Police department requests for training on how to better deal with the public have skyrockete­d since the death of George Floyd and the protests that followed, particular­ly as calls to defund police rise and cities pass reforms aimed at cracking down on police brutality.

The Police Executive Research Forum’s training effort began five years ago after the shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black man, in Ferguson, Missouri, and has been updated since with fresh techniques.

The idea had its genesis in the United Kingdom, where most officers don’t carry handguns, forum director Chuck Wexler said.

It’s a mix of classroom training and scenarios played out with actors to give

officers time to work through what they’ve learned.

The goal is to take the training to as many of the nation’s 18,000 law enforcemen­t agencies as possible.

New York City announced all 36,500 officers will get the training, and all 35,000 police officers in New Jersey are being trained. Smaller department­s are reaching out, and the agency is doing regional sessions. The first regional session was held in late July for officers from 90 police department­s in New England, who are then expected to take what they’ve learned back to their department­s and train other officers. There was also a session in Colorado. The latest training wrapped up Friday in Tampa.

Police officers are asked to do a lot. They’re asked to be roadside psychologi­sts, family counselors, mental health workers – and even soldiers in an active-shooter event, said Saco Police Chief Jack Clements, whose agency hosted the event in New England. That’s why it’s important to rehearse. “Rather than rushing in and winding up in an encounter that’s deadly force, let’s back up, slow down, talk, formulate a plan. Then engage. If it takes an hour

to de-escalate this guy, that’s fine. Take the time,” the chief said.

Some officers say the training is already saving lives.

In Texas, a police officer responded to a call for a suicidal woman with a knife a couple of weeks after receiving the training in Harris County. The woman had rammed a vehicle in which her boyfriend was sitting and nearly hit a deputy before fleeing and locking herself in an apartment.

The first deputies on the scene kicked in the door, but Sgt. Pete Smith slowed things down and initiated a conversati­on when he arrived. Assured that he was there to help, the woman dropped her knife.

Instead of a violent arrest, or worse, she was taken for a mental health evaluation, said Sgt. Jose Gomez, part of the department’s behavioral health training unit, who was responsibl­e for securing the training.

In Saco, the officers spent the first day in the classroom before working through role-playing exercises on the second day.

The scenarios focused on the vast majority of encounters with the public where no gun is present, but may involve knives or weapons.

In the tire-slashing scenario, the three officers kept a distance from the man who was displaying a knife. The man was a threat, they said, but not an imminent one as long as he remained at a safe distance. The three of them quickly designated the officer who would do the speaking.

Long minutes dragged by as the officer and assailant talked and commiserat­ed, allowing the focus of the conversati­on to shift away from the boss. They ended up talking about customizin­g cars. The man put down his knife.

After the exercise, a police officer from New Haven, Connecticu­t, said during the debriefing that he kept the “21-foot rule” in mind.

The 21-foot distance is sometimes referred to as the “kill zone.” It’s drilled into officers that at that distance someone armed with a knife, baseball bat or other weapon can quickly close the distance and inflict deadly injuries.

Officers who want to protect themselves and survive to go home at the end of the shift are more likely to use deadly force simply because that’s what they were trained to do once that distance limit is broken.

After listening in on the post-training conversati­on, Wexler said he was troubled by the results he’s seen from what he believes to be an arbitrary rule taught in police training.

“These are what you would call the lawful but awful kinds of shootings,” Wexler said.

Sometimes, he said, winning means backing away to keep a distance, instead of charging into a situation or standing one’s ground. It means taking time to assess and communicat­e, he said.

Raphael Thornton, who played the role of the knife-wielding assailant, said officers aren’t always sold on textbook training. But, he said, that changes with the role-playing.

“That’s when we really get the buyin,” said Thornton, who works for the Camden County Police Department in New Jersey. “If we have any naysayers when they leave the classroom, they really buy in when they get out there. They get to put what they learned into action.”

 ?? DAVID SHARP/AP ?? Jose Otero from the New York City Police Department, right, holds a plastic knife during a scenario. Officers were learning de-escalation techniques.
DAVID SHARP/AP Jose Otero from the New York City Police Department, right, holds a plastic knife during a scenario. Officers were learning de-escalation techniques.

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