Quicker Response to Active Shooters

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Best Practices AMAURY MURGADO

QUICKER RESPONSE TO ACTIVE SHOOTERS Motor officers are often first on the scene of any school shooting, and they need better tools to be more effective.

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here are four possible ways to mitigate the damage inflicted by an active shooter. You can harden the target, arm and train potential victims, strengthen prevention programs and suspect identification, and improve law enforcement response times. Each one of these steps is easier said than done because of the associated bureaucratic, political, and budgetary considerations. Department of Homeland Security research reveals that the average duration of an active shooter incident at a school is 12.5 minutes. In contrast, the average response time for law enforcement is 18 minutes. That means it only makes sense for us to find ways to improve our response times. Working on our response times is about the only anti-active shooter measure that we can take at the operator level. We must find a way to shave off some time and in doing so, create some type of tactical advantage.

In order to increase response times, you have to look at your available resources and pair them with the situation you want to improve. Two questions should immediately pop into mind: What resources aren’t you tapping into, and of the ones you are using, how can you use them more effectively? Many agencies were asking these questions after last December’s Sandy Hook massacre, including mine. So let me share with you how I created a tactical advantage for law enforcement in my jurisdiction. I command four units within my agency’s Special Operations Division. One of them is motors, which has played a traditional role in traffic enforcement. The motor unit also conducts various escorts and help with motorcycle safety education programs. For the most part in any other operations, the motor officers traditionally served a support role unless they find themselves in an exigent circumstance. Despite its traditional mission, I always thought our motor unit could assume a more tactical posture and play less of a support role, especially when responding to school shootings. Our motor officers were already covering school zones immediately before and after school. So if something took place during that time frame, they would be some of the first

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POLICE OCTOBER 2013

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EXISTING RESOURCES

In order to respond effectively to active shooter incidents, patrol officers need rifles.

officers to arrive. Also, since motors are such a specialized unit, it is easier to pull them off of their primary missions and redirect them whenever necessary. Actual incidents supported my belief. In the last two out of three shootings my agency has been involved with, the first responder on the scene was a motor officer. Though these shooting incidents did not involve an active shooter, the motor officers would have had to respond the For more Best Practices go to www.PoliceMag.com/bestpractices


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