Best Practices Amaury Murgado
3 Things to Make You a Success Be a better officer by maintaining curiosity, urgency, and a thirst for knowledge.
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PhotoS: Amaury murgado
finding potential red flags and seeing s a longtime law enforcement ofif they lead anywhere. If you are not ficer (LEO) starting my 27th year, curious you will miss clues, hints, and I have had plenty of time to reflect suspicious coincidences. on what it takes to be successful. I Curiosity crosses over all levels of have realized that being a LEO is a lot investigations. Think about the way a simpler than I imagined; but simple small child looks at the world. Toddlers didn't make it easy. I have found there are seeing things for the first time and are three essential characteristics trying to understand not only what that are common to all outstanding they are seeing but why. This is a useLEOs: having curiosity, maintaining a If you are not curious you'll miss things. ful way for officers to view the world. sense of urgency, and having a thirst for knowledge. It's easy to remember the three if you use the Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "Curiosity is lying in wait for every secret." That's what we do…we unlock answers so we can acronym CUT. bring secrets out into the open. Only an innate curiosity will bring important questions to the forefront. If they are never Curiosity asked there will never be answers. Curiosity is one of those essential characteristics for any I remember early in my career my zone partner helped LEO assignment. Curiosity means wondering about how things happen and why. It means questioning what you see, solve a murder simply by being curious. It was late at night and as we were leaving a check on the well-being of a citizen, hear, and more importantly what people do. For example, why is the suspect adamant about his side he spotted a suspicious drop of something on the driveway of the story and yet he can't look you in the eye while telling that reflected off his flashlight. Someone else might have it? Maybe it means something or maybe it doesn't, but you'll just ignored it. It could have been a drop of oil or anything never know for sure until you find out. Curiosity is the art of car-related and nothing more. However, upon closer examination it looked like a drop of dried blood. That one clue led us to ask more questions, to conduct an area canvass of the neighborhood, and then to have our detectives come out to the scene based on new information we developed. They ended up solving the case a few hours later complete with a murder confession. If you have no sense of curiosity then you really have no business being in law enforcement. You should always be asking why and sometimes even why not. In order to be curious you have to stop, look, and listen. We are too quick to throw out possibilities based on our own bias. Just because you don't think it happened a certain way One way to seek out knowledge is to work with other units. doesn't mean it didn't. The fictional char14
POLICE MAY 2014
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