Best Practices AMAURY MURGADO
ABCS OF IN-PROGRESS CALLS Keep an evolving call under control by assessing, relying on basics, and containing the area.
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PHOTO COURTESY OSCEOLA COUNTY (FLA.) SHERIFF’S OFFICE
size up the situation, confirm or deny any information, and relay back to the supervisor an update as to status and legitimacy of the call. There was a time when agencies would just roll anything they felt they needed as a matter of routine. However, in these times of lean budgets and diminishing resources, you need to be mindful of using your assets carefully. What you expend now may not be available later. My experience has taught me that if the supervisor starts an initial response and gives it a few extra minutes, he or she will get the information needASSESS THE SITUATION ed to formulate an informed response. Don't squander valuble resources. Whatever the call, assessing the situObviously, if left with no other choice, ation will let you determine what resources you need you plan for the worst and adjust later. But that’s not the same and what tactics you will employ. Far too often officers go thing as just arbitrarily throwing resources at a problem you half-cocked into a situation and waste valuable time and have yet to clearly identify because you didn’t take the time resources that they may need later on. All it takes is for a to do so. supervisor to ask a few questions and filter the answers in order to make the best decisions possible. Once a supervi- BASICS RULE THE DAY sor starts making decisions, it’s hard to change paths, so the The basics will always get you through any situation. It’s choices need to be good early on. the foundation we have all used to build our careers on. The The problem with not having inforproblem these days is that people accept mation is it creates a void. It is human mediocrity and hope things will somenature to fill in this void with either inhow work out, and administrators have formation based on past experience or cut too much training—even the basics. with imagination. Either way, chances We are starting to fail at the very tasks are that if you’re missing information we want accomplished because we no you will make poor decisions up front, longer train for them. which will cost you later on as the call For example, when was the last time progresses. your agency trained with your K-9 Unit You should always be prepared to on perimeters, did any training at roll CP, scribe, and perimeter are part of get a basic response rolling. Once that’s call, or gave the Incident Command Systhe ABCs. done, the next focus should be on gettem anything but lip service? We have a ting a unit to the scene as soon as possible to get up-to-date great deal of post-9/11 gear, but how helpful is it if no one information. Remember, dispatch only gives you the infor- knows how to perform the simplest tasks effectively? It’s mation they receive. They are a conduit for raw information nice if you look cool in your MultiCam uniforms and have that has yet to be confirmed. AR-15s that look like they came from Star Wars, but they Any experienced officer knows that the information you won’t help you set up a perimeter. initially receive is not always correct. It’s not the dispatchIt’s never too late to start focusing on the basics again. Iners’ fault, as they are just repeating the answers they get to corporate them into your next standardized response. For their questions. But that first officer on the scene needs to example, say a call for a burglary in progress goes out. The PHOTO: AMAURY MURGADO
n-progress calls evolve within a framework of controlled chaos. Though this framework includes many variables, I can identify the three most common that detract from our efforts: officers wanting to talk on the radio at the same time, officers focusing on catching the bad guy as individuals instead of members of a team, and officers and supervisors alike ignoring basic response fundamentals. You can help improve your management of the situation by remembering the ABCs of inprogress calls: Assess the situation, Basics rule the day, and Contain it or lose it.
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POLICE DECEMBER 2012
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