Think It Through AMAURY MURGADO
HOUSE PARTY Neighbors are complaining about loud music, fighting, and cars parked on sidewalks at a residence in a known gang area. How will you respond?
I
n every call for service, you should think things through before you begin your response. Each call can be broken down into three phases: pre-response, response, and postresponse. The following scenario is designed to help you think things through rather than give you a specific way to handle the call.
SITUATION Dispatch has received numerous calls about a large house
party. Cars are parked in the street, on sidewalks, and in people's yards. The music is very loud and there are several reports of fighting. There is one report of a gun being flashed
around. Callers estimate there are well over 100 people involved and say more cars keep arriving,
INITIAL THOUGHTS This area is known for its gang activity, so you may not be dealing with just a group of rowdy college kids. The numbers are not in your favor. "One man, one riot" might be great for Chuck Norris, but not for the rest of us. Your squad is not going to be enough. You need to hold all non in-progress calls until you get the situation under control. Obviously you need eyes on the ground as soon as possible. You would love to have eyes in the sky and have at least two K-9 units respond, but you know all of that is subject to availability. Assuming there is no gunfire, you hope this is a situation where talking to the homeowners (or responsible party) and a show of force is all you'll need.
PHOTO: ©ISTOCKPHOTO.COM
PRE-RESPONSE
14
POLICE MAY 2016
Think It Through Questions • What's your manpower looking like right now? • How can you get officers there without compromising them? • How will you handle the other calls for service that are bound to come in? • If it gets too big for you to handle, what other resources can you call in? This is a fluid situation where anything can happen. This is where having some structure goes a long way. Your first order of business is obtaining real-time information. You send in a unit to get in as close as possible. They need to pick a safe place to observe the target area and report back. You order lights and siren the whole way and to keep their lights on after they arrive. The effects should help thin out the crowd. You need to identify ingress and egress points to avoid responding units getting caught in a huge traffic jam. You need a makeshift command post and a staging area. There are no exigent circumstances so far, so keep it simple. Your knowledge of the area allows you to pick the entrance to the subdivision for your command post and use the neighborhood playground parking lot, located just inside the subdivision, as your staging area.