Police Department Policy

Response to Active Assailant 03-15

Florida City Police Department

Policy Text
FLORIDA CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTIVE 03-15 RESPONSE TO ACTIVE ASSAILANT EVENTS PURPOSE: The purpose of this policy is to establish guidelines for Florida City Police Department sworn and non-sworn personnel responding to an Active Assailant Event (AAE). DISCUSSION: Before Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) concepts were developed, patrol law enforcement officers responding to AAE and other high-risk event acted with the equipment they carried and handled the matters themselves. Once SWAT teams were established, agencies trained initial responding officers to set perimeters and contain AAEs until a SWAT team arrived. This led to unacceptable delays in stopping active assailants and mitigating casualties. Law Enforcement philosophy evolved and it is now recognized that containment is not the best practice; the first law enforcement officers on the scene must take immediate action to stop the threat, acting alone when necessary. A single officer response to an AAE may be required in response to an armed individual who is actively injuring or killing people. Florida City Police Officers responding to these events should remain cognizant that time is of the essence because most innocent lives are lost during the first few minutes of the AAE event. It is imperative that Officers rapidly assess the situation and act quickly. These tactics are specifically designed for then-occurring AAEs and situations where people are reasonably believed to have suffered life-threatening injuries because of the AAE. These tactics are not necessarily appropriate for barricaded persons or hostage situations when active harm toward others is not occurring or there are no people present who need to be immediately rescued because of their life-threatening injuries. Although an active assailant exhibits some of the same basic characteristics as hostage and barricaded suspects, active assailant suspects are generally quite different. Active assailant situations usually develop quickly into a deadly situation and often concluded in a relatively short period of time. Any delay in response and action may result in the further loss of life. DEFINITIONS: A. Active Assailant — One or more people who participate in a life-threatening assault and demonstrate their intent to continuously or systematically kill or wound others. B. Active Assailant Event (AAE) — An incident where one or more Active Assailants act to harm or kill others. Such events include, but are not limited to: School shootings, workplace violence, terrorist activities, and snipers. Ambulance Exchange Point (AEP) — An area that is located near the Triage Post where, after triage is completed, victims are moved to for awaiting transport. The area should have easy ingress and egress and allow for staging of multiple ambulances. Coach Aaron Feis Guardian Program — The Coach Aaron Feis Guardian Program was established in 2018 through the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act. Guardians are armed personnel who aid in the prevention or abatement of active assailant incidents on school premises. They are either school employees who volunteer to serve in addition to official job duties or personnel hired for the specific purpose of serving as a school guardian. Barricaded Subject — A person who takes a position of confinement to avoid apprehension ( the use or threatened use of force to resist apprehension shall have been displayed through actions or words and the officer shall have reason to believe the suspect will use force to avoid apprehension). A barricaded subject situation is not one where active deadly force is occurring or where there are victims of deadly force with life threatening injuries who need to be immediately rescued, as that is an AAE. Casualty Collection Point (CCP) — A temporary location(s) in the Warm Zone where injured victims can be quickly and safely assembled until it is feasible to move the patients to the Triage Post or another formal treatment area. . Critical Incident Stress Management Team (CISM) — A multi-faceted team comprised of agency and outside personnel that includes trained mental health professionals and religious volunteers. |. Command Post— A post established by the Incident Commander to direct emergency operations. This may include where the Unified Command is located. Contact Team — A team formed by the first two to five law enforcement officers to arrive on scene who are capable of immediate response to an AAE. Contact Team formation are generally a

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