Saturday, February 25, 2023

Fear Factor

I thought this was pretty solid advice. So I'm offering it up for your review.

Any thoughts?? 


As a regular writer on police matters, I am in the crosshairs of many critics. Reactions to any pro-police piece on social media range from personal threats to insults to proud displays of the critic’s ignorance. 

One such comment claimed, “to shoot somebody all an officer has to do is say they were scared”. 

Versions of that claim are repeated, often along with the lament over what the critic thinks a “warrior mindset” is that creates aggression and paranoia among police officers.

Being afraid is never a justification for force or aggression. A fear that is rational, defensible, and articulable is a lawful and valid reason for the caution shown by officers.

My first “man with a gun” call sent a cold chill through my body. I was with my training officer. I don’t even remember what came of the call, I just remember how it affected me physically. I looked over at my trainer who hadn’t let me even drive the patrol car yet. He was as cool as a cucumber as he hit the lights and siren.

Of all the things I had to learn during my training as a rookie, dealing with fear was probably the most important thing. I had to learn the difference between courage and fearlessness. Good judgment does not come with fearlessness. I once had a college intern riding with me. On the first night of his ride-along, we responded to a burglary alarm at a small manufacturing facility. 
As I positioned my patrol car strategically to observe the south and west sides of a fenced enclosure around the facility to wait for a second unit to cover the other sides of the building, my intern spontaneously jumped out of the passenger seat, ran across the parking lot, and jumped over the fence, presumably to catch a burglar. Was he fearless? Yes. Was he stupid? Yes.

Courage only exists in the face of fear otherwise it is merely fearlessness which is cluelessness at its best and suicidal at its worst. What then is the role of fear in policing and when does it operate? The simple answer to the question of when is: always.

Although we think of fear as an emotion, it is a complex change in body chemistry triggered by the brain’s perception of a threat. That perception is based on experiences in life gleaned from living and learning. Those experiences are so embedded in the memory that all kinds of cues to that memory can trigger the body’s fear response. An amazing array of body chemistry alterations happen in response to a perceived threat.
The threat doesn’t have to be an exact replication of a previous dangerous experience. A parental lecture about the hazards of driving in the rain can create a life-long fear response in a driver on a rainy day. 
Even a precursor to rain such as a darkened sky, gust of wind, or a change in air pressure can cause the brain to alert the body to the threat of wet pavement. The response could be extra caution, slower speeds, a heightened awareness of other traffic, or even a decision not to drive at all. That is the value of fear. 

A police officer’s training and experience will result in multiple fear alerts resulting in a constant high level of threat awareness. They know that officers have been assaulted by all kinds of people in all kinds of situations. Officers have been attacked and killed stopping to help a stranded motorist, checking on someone’s well-being, and on the most minor of calls from jay-walking to shoplifting. Critics have no understanding of the variety of situations that pose a threat to law enforcement officers. Officers know that they will be assaulted at some point and want to avoid the delay that surprise creates in taking defensive action. Imagine that you have been given the job of cleaning out several hundred old gym lockers. In the process, you come across one occupied by a rattlesnake! Now imagine the same assignment with the information that one of those lockers has a rattlesnake in it.

To an onlooker, the locker cleaner might look foolish as they approach each metal door slowly and carefully, wondering if this is the one with the snake. But to the person checking each of those units, that caution is quite sensible and might save their life! Likewise, an observer might question why an officer approaches with a hand on their weapon, or stays behind cover making verbal commands, or chooses to gather a few facts before rushing into a building. It is a prudent response to training and experience that protects the officer, the public, and even a suspect.

This is the courage that police officers must have. Not fearlessly charging into a situation, but courageously facing dangers known and unknown every day.

17 comments:

  1. These thoughts are things of the past. The CMPD just stages and waits for the criminals to leave. We are too short staffed. Half our officers have PTSD and burn out. We have coworkers that have committed cowardism and had sex at work. Many of these people are supervisors, now. Why don’t you push for change and terminations instead of preaching war stories? We need more people, too.

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  2. Most of the new guys are guinia pigs for different budget strategies and managers.

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  3. If you can, retire NOW! Take advantage of the Covid hazard pay (if you got it) that bumped up your final pay and run, don’t walk to the nearest exit! There ain’t enough gum to plug the leaks in this boat. Unless there are new leaderships and new direction, this bitch is headed to Davey (Marcus) Jones’s locker!

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  4. These are sweet words by the Rea Road Coalition. Unfortunately, that’s not reality around CMPD.

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  5. Until Johnny Jennings quits worrying about what his “legacy” will be and starts worrying about the citizens and tax payers of Charlotte & Mecklenburg County the department will continue to be ineffective in “To protect the lives and property of the citizens” – which is basic to ALL law enforcement.

    Sheriff McFadden is even worse, the turnover rate at the Sheriff’s Department is even higher and the jail can not be sufficiently staffed. The Sheriff’s department does not have the personnel to even provide security for the county courthouse and has had to farm that out to a 3rd party.

    The media will bastardize any officer any chance it gets, but I have yet to see Chief Jennings or Sheriff McFadden - or any of either’s respective underlings - making the rounds on the media reporting anything positive about their employees or law enforcement.

    Chief Jennings can’t have his “CMPD Serves” and then take 2, 3, 4 hours to respond to a traffic wreck, or several minutes to even answer a call to 911. Or to have radio traffic reporting “no units available city wide”…

    If a jailer is assaulted by an inmate, Sheriff McFadden wants to know what that employee did to precipitate the assault. Makes sense to blame the employee first and then look to excuse the criminal’s actions.

    If you are a citizen and apply for a concealed carry permit, be prepared to wait a year because Sheriff McFadden doesn’t want you to have a firearm as a law abiding citizen. Probably why he is being sued in Federal Court.

    If you are a victim, Chief Jennings doesn’t want to return a firearm to any citizen that was stolen and recovered or taken for “safe keeping”. Be prepared to wait a year to get your firearm back from the police.

    McFadden and Jennings I can tell you what your legacies will be “WOKE & BROKE” but that’s okay- it’s all about your self-images….

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    1. I’m sorry to hear about the seized gun thing. Shows the direction of Charlotte got a lot.

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  6. Buckle up bitches, you ain’t even barely seen the opening act of this shit show. The leadership is fleecing Charlotte for personal gain. Look no further than the Mayor and her Country Club membership, or good old Smuggie. The only one caught was Cannon. If you for one second think things are on the up and up, you’re drinking the Kool Aid, and part of the problem. Charlotte is managed by INACTION. CMPD, CFD, McFaddenville, etc. The entire City is ran by a bunch of post turtles well versed in the 10 D’s of Avoiding Accountability. Deflection, distraction, denial, delay, discount, deceive, divide, dulcify, discredit, and destroy. Quit rearranging the deck chairs, you’re on a sinking ship. Grab a life vest (new job somewhere other than Charlotte), or find the closest lifeboat (retire).

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  7. Here’s a fucking cheat sheet for you readers on here. This place has been a shithole for years and that ain’t changing for you. Stop being vain and accept your circumstances. This was happening with Chief Monroe 15 years ago. Most people just want a check for nothing around here which is the culture at play. Look at the chain of command and tell me you ain’t laughing??

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  8. jj and his black power fist at the floyd protest can go suck a lemon. hope you boys enjoy the crt training the academy is pushing now. gotta take two extra classes of that bs cause jj got an issue with whitey. i’ll tell u how to eat an elephant, start at its ass like a hyena and work your way in….

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  9. Hidey Hole!! If you ain't in it then you're a dumbass.

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  10. Hidey Hole Guy=Warehouse Supervisor

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  11. A CMPD supervisor can be kicked out of 2 divisions and still keep their job. Freaking amazing! They usually end up at the academy in some capacity.

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    1. My entire unit complained on our supervisor. They promoted and moved her away to a paper pusher job. Nothing new nothing changed nothing different.

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  12. Take back the streets…let them crime gun boys cook. Let….them….cook!

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  13. Just say you were in fear of your life... What difference would it make, Spencer Merriweather’s law school flunkies wouldn't prosecute you to begin with…well, unless you are an officer of the law.....

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