After Dallas shooting, U.S. police forces
rethinking tactics
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[July 11, 2016]
By Nick Carey
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Police departments
across the United States are searching for new tactics for a more
difficult era of racial tension, increasingly lethal mass shootings and
global terrorism.
After last week's killing of five officers in Dallas, the
deadliest assault on U.S. law enforcement since the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks, nearly half of America's 30 biggest cities have issued
directives to pair up police officers on calls to boost safety,
according to a Reuters survey of police departments.
And one, Indianapolis, said it would consider the use of robots to
deliberately deliver lethal force, an unprecedented tactic until
Thursday when the Dallas police department used a military-grade
robot to deliver and detonate explosives where the shooter was holed
up.
While a wave of anti-police protests since the 2014 killing of an
unarmed black teen in Ferguson, Missouri, has revived memories of
1960s protests over civil rights and the Vietnam War, Thursday's
shooting marked something different: a willingness to take up arms
against police.
Ambushes against police on Thursday and Friday in Tennessee, Georgia
and Missouri added to a sense of being under siege and vulnerable at
a time when many departments already were grappling with heightened
community suspicion over the use of deadly force.
Responding to the Dallas shooting, Denver’s police union wants
officers to wear riot gear for local protests and to be armed with
AR-15 assault rifles while patrolling Denver International Airport,
the union said in a letter to the mayor published in The Denver
Post.
The most immediate change is the pairing up of officers. Thirteen of
the country's 30 biggest city police department said they are
pairing up officers - a change that could strain already thinly
staffed police ranks in some regions.
(The 13 are New York City, Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, Phoenix,
San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, Indianapolis, Seattle, Memphis,
Boston and Portland.)
In Albuquerque, New Mexico — one of several cities dealing with an
officer shortage — pairing officers could mean “possibly longer
response times for lower priority calls,” said its police spokesman,
Simon Drobik. And for cities with tight municipal budgets, some
question whether this expensive strategy can last beyond the short
term.
Doubling up officers "is a resource-intense approach and it will be
a significant challenge for some police departments to sustain that
strategy for very long," said Thomas Manger, president of the Major
Cities Chiefs Association (MCCA), which represents police chiefs
from the country's largest cities.
He predicted over the longer term that police will increase
surveillance and expand their security presence at major events
across the country. "This will cause complaints about violating
people's constitutional rights to free assembly, but it is the only
way to guarantee safety," he said.
'TARGETS ON THEIR BACK'
The attack in Dallas came during a demonstration Thursday over the
shooting by police of two black men. Alton Sterling, 37, was shot by
police in Baton Rouge on Tuesday and Philando Castile, 32, was
killed on Wednesday night in a St. Paul, Minnesota suburb.
The Dallas shooting also left seven officers injured.
"We need to figure out a way to ensure that police officers don't
get targeted, because right now they do have targets on their
backs," said Andrea Edmiston, director of governmental affairs for
the National Association of Police Organizations, which represents
about 241,000 U.S. police officers.
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Law officers stand on a street during protests in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, U.S., July 10, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Few of the police forces approached by Reuters said they could
discuss specific changes in tactics beyond pairing officers on the
beat. Los Angeles and Denver, for instance, declined for safety
reasons to discuss tactics.
Indianapolis police spokesman Kendale Adams said his department
would consider using a robot to deliver a bomb. "Our team will
consider all options in (a) deadly force encounter," he said in an
e-mail.
If every police department had New York City's resources, the
challenges would be much less.
New York police spokesman Stephen Davis said some 1,500 of the
city's 36,000 police officers have received coordinated heavy
weapons training.
Davis said there are officers around the clock who can respond to an
active shooter situation in an estimated three to five minutes.
"As most active shooter situations last under 10 minutes, that speed
is crucial," he said. "But we are well aware of the luxury that we
have with so many resources available to us."
Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research
Forum, a law enforcement policy group, said that as 90 percent of
America's 18,000 police forces have under 50 officers, many simply
cannot afford the kind of staff needed to respond as quickly as
needed to mass shootings.
Wexler said the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013 had been a milestone
for police in realizing that major public events could become
targets.
"Police departments will have to deploy additional forces to what
have traditionally been low-risk events," he said, "because those
events now have the potential for some extremist or madman to commit
violent acts."
But he said that the best way to reduce deaths from attacks with
semi-automatic weapons is to gain the trust of local communities so
people will come forward and help prevent attacks. Once an attack
starts, there is only so much the police can do.
The MCCA's Manger said that beyond police strategy and tactics, what
America needs is a change of mindset.
"Everyone on both sides needs to take a step back.”
(Additional reporting by Julia Harte in Washington; Editing by Jason
Szep and Mary Milliken)
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