Stanley Family - Search Warrant, Affidavit, And Search Warrant Return
High Risk Warrant Ex
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Riverhead Police Department Training Division “Click” to START Title: High Risk Warrant Execution PPT Version: Windows 2002/XP Created: April 20 th , 2004 by Information & Technologies Section - Version: 1.0
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Transcript of High Risk Warrant Ex
- 1. Riverhead Police Department Training Division Click to START Title: High Risk Warrant Execution PPT Version: Windows 2002/XP Created: April 20 th , 2004 by Information & Technologies Section - Version: 1.0
- 2. Riverhead Police Department High Risk Warrant Execution 2004
- 3. To fight and conqueror in all your battles is not supreme excellence, supreme excellence consists of breaking the enemies resistance without fighting. Sun Tzu
- 4. High Risk Warrant Execution Overview
- Introduction
- Differences in Entry Tactics
- Differences in Training
- Tactical Mindset
- Room Clears
- Conclusion
- 5. Introduction
- 6. Officer Safety During Warrant Service
- The first consideration when serving warrants should always be Officer Safety!
- 7. Training Objectives
- This block of instruction emphasizes individual officer basic entry and safety techniques.
- Understanding entry breaching techniques and their importance to the success of the operation.
- Familiarization with diversionary techniques and devices .
- Understanding and executing basic movement techniques and officer safety concerns while entering and moving through unknown locations.
- The techniques necessary to enhance the officer's ability to ascend and descend various types of stairways.
- 8. Difference in Entry Tactics
- Regarding the Riverhead Police Department - the Entry Tactics utilized in a High Risk Warrant Execution are different from those utilized during a Barricaded Subject, Hostage Rescue, or Active Shooter situation.
- 9. Where did modern entry tactics originate from?
- Israeli Military Hostage Rescue Operations during 1970s.
- 10. What is the difference between Military Entry and a Law
Enforcement Entry?
- Law Enforcement has to make more DECISIONS!
- The Military basically Frags and Sprays.
- Law Enforcement Breaches, Bangs, Rushes, and is constantly making decisions.
- 11. Remember!
- Hall Boss System with Shield / Cover and Dynamic Room Entries are for
- ACTIVE SHOOTER, BARRICADED SUBJECT, and HOSTAGE RESCUE
- Modified Hall Boss System with solo Shield and Modified Room Entries are for
- HIGH RISK WARRANT EXECUTION
- 12. Keep in Mind!
- A High Risk Warrant could transition into a Barricaded Subject very quickly. This would immediately dictate a change in the type of entry tactic used.
- 13. Differences in Training vs. Reality
- Training Reality
- Errors: Do Overs Consequences
- Liability: Say Sorry Financial / Jail
- Risk: Safe Environment Injury / Death
- Stress: Low Stress High Stress / Melt Down
- 14. Stress Affects Performance and Decision Making
- As stress goes up the ability to make good decision goes down.
- Tunnel Vision.
- Auditory Exclusion.
- Sensory Overload
- Default to your level of Training.
- 15. Who shoots 100% at the range?
- 100% Firearms qualifications (60 Rounds).
- 9-28% Hit percentage on the street.
- 20% C.I.R.T. score on mobile shooting (1 out of 5 rounds makes contact).
- 87% of all handgun wounds are initially survivable.
- 3% Your chances of stopping threat with one round (Eradicating the threat).
- 16. What does this mean?
- The perpetrator can shoot back!
- 17. The Tactical Mindset
- Boyds Loop (O.O.D.A.).
- Hicks Law.
- Levels of awareness.
- Muzzle discipline.
- Proper use of cover.
- M&M principle.
- 18. Boyds Loop
- Colonel John Boyd U.S. Air Force.
- The cycle your mind must follow in order to make proper decisions.
- Observe
- Orient
- Decide
- Act
- 19. O.O.D.A. Loop OBSERVE ORIENT DECIDE ACT
- 20. Hicks Law
- W. E. Hick
- Conducts study on performance phenomena in 1952.
- The time it takes to make a decision is roughly proportional to the log of the number of alternatives .
- The more decisions you have to make, the more time it will take.
- 21. What is the most powerful weapon you possess?
- The brain is the primary weapon, all else is supplemental.
- John Stienbeck
- 22. Levels of Awareness
- Colonel Jeff Cooper U.S.M.C.
- A color coded chart to show a persons level of readiness.
- A tactical team should all be at the same appropriate level during an operation.
- 23. COMPLACENT GENERALLY ALERT ALERT to X READY for ACTION CHAOS Levels of Awareness
- 24. Condition White
- A state of complacency.
- In a fog or a daze.
- Not aware of what is going on around you.
- 25. Condition Yellow
- Generally Alert.
- Aware of what is going on around you.
- Where your head should be while working.
- 26. Condition Orange
- Alert to X.
- Something catches your attention or seems out of the ordinary.
- When the hair stands up on the back of your neck.
- When something like this happens check it out, dont bypass it, trust your senses.
- 27. Condition Red
- Ready for Action.
- Completely focused on what you are doing.
- Where your head should be during a search warrant.
- 28. Condition Black
- Chaos.
- The situation is controlling you, you are not in control of the situation.
- Sensory overload.
- 29. Ballistic Equation
- 9mm Round 1,240 FPS
- YFA 22 FPS
- You cannot out run a bullet!
- 30.
- As you clear rooms during a High Risk Warrant your brain can only process the raw data it is receiving at a certain rate depending upon your ability and given parameters. If you are having difficulty interpreting this data, then you are moving too fast. Slow Down!
- 31.
- The team must stay and work together. You can only move as fast as the slowest guy on the team. Remember Slow is Fast!
- 32.
- YES!
- 33.
- 50% of all injuries to Tactical Team Members during high risk room entries are caused by their own Tactical Team Members.
- You must be aware of where your muzzle is pointed at all times.
- You must keep your finger off the trigger unless you are going to fire the weapon.
- 34.
- Four Weapons Positions
- Shoot (Weapon out and ready)
- Scan (Center axis position)
- Security (Weapon pointed to ground)
- Safe (Holstered)
- 35.
- When you have or perceive a threat capable of causing serious physical injury or death and no one else is between you and that threat.
- 36.
- At the threat or the perceived threat area.
- Eyes, Muzzle, Threat
- Otherwise you should have your weapon in Security Position or Safe Position (Holstered).
- 37.
- OFF THE TRIGGER!
- An accidental discharge during a room entry can be dangerous to yourself and your team members.
- 38.
- Lubbock, Texas - July 13 th , 2001
- Suspect Richard Robinson (Armed)
- Team Leader Sgt. Kevin Cox is struck in the head by a round from his own sniper and killed.
- 300 + Rounds are fired into the home by Police.
- The Suspect is wounded and never fired a shot.
- 39.
- 40.
- Cover is relative to the degree of the threat.
- It must offer a reasonable expectation of protection.
- As it relates to the firearm it must have ballistic integrity, in that, it will defeat or deflect a round.
- 41.
- Engine block of a vehicle
- Dumpster
- Tree
- Brick Building
- Steel Mailbox
- Ballistic Shield (Bunker)
- 42.
- Fire Hydrant
- Sheetrock Wall
- Refrigerator
- Curb
- Newspaper
- Car Doors
- Furniture
- 43.
- Slice the pie if any part of you is seen by the suspect it should be your eye and the muzzle of your weapon.
- Shoot around cover, not over it.
- Stay off cover, dont get sucked into it.
- Dont give up your cover for a shot.
- 44. Slicing the Pie All the suspect should see is your eye and the muzzle of your weapon.
- 45.
- Minimize your body exposure to the threat and maximize your distance from the threat.
- 46.
- Minimize your body exposure to the threat and maximize your distance from the threat.
- 47.
- Two Clears that must be completed in order to declare a room safe and secure.
- 1. Primary Clear (5 Areas of Responsibility)
- 2. Secondary Clear Objects (Furniture, Closets, Cabinets, etc.)
- 48. Primary Clear 5 Areas of Responsibility
- 49. Primary Clear All 4 Corners 1. Door Corner 2. Long Corner 3. Diagonal Corner 4. Blind Corner
- 50. Primary Clear And the Center of the Room
- 51.
- Try to dominate and secure as fast as possible.
- Start secondary clears after all primary clears are complete.
- Closed doors can be either breached as you go or secured for breach at a later time.
- 52. Clearing Rooms
- 53. Room Clearing: Corner Fed Room 2 S Shield Starts Room Clear
- 54. 2 #2 Covers Hallway Long S
- 55. 2 Diagonal Corner Cleared S
- 56. 2 Long Corner Cleared S
- 57. 2 Door Corner Cleared S
- 58. 2 Switch Responsibilities S
- 59. 2 Shield Now Has Hallway Long S
- 60. 2 #2 Clears Blind Corner S
- 61. 2 And Completes Center Room Clear S
- 62. Room Clearing: Center Fed Room 2 S Shield Starts Room Clear 3
- 63. 2 #2 Covers Hallway Long S 3
- 64. 2 Diagonal Corner Cleared S 3
- 65. 2 S Diagonal Corner Cleared 3
- 66. 2 S Responsibilities Switch 3
- 67. 2 S #3 Now Covers Hallway Long 3
- 68. 2 S Blind Corners are Cleared Simultaneously 3
- 69. 2 S 3 And the Center Room Clear is Completed
- 70. Bullets do not Ricochet as we Think! Stay away from walls!
- 71. Be Careful when using Corners as Cover!
- 72. Suspect Contact and Apprehension
- One Officer should give clear and concise orders to the suspect.
- Stop suspects deadly behavior.
- Take suspect into custody.
- Remain in a position of cover, bring the suspect to you.
- 73. Suspect Apprehension 2 S Remain in a Position of Cover, Bring the Suspect to You. 3 Shield gives Suspect commands. #2 Covers Hallway Long. #3 Cuffs and Handles Suspect.
- 74. Prepare for Contingencies
- Perimeter containment.
- Primary entry is open (No breach required).
- Suspect surrenders as you approach the target location.
- Suspect leaves the area in a vehicle.
- Suspect leaves the area on foot.
- 75. Key Factors for a Successful Operation
- Maximum use of Cover.
- Numeric Superiority Show of Force.
- Firepower Superiority.
- Speed Surprise Shock Action.
- Accuracy the operation must not only be fast, it must also be effective.
- Safety Must be a formal part of planning.
- 76. High Risk Warrant Execution has been presented to you by the Riverhead Police Departments Critical Incident Response Team. Instructors: P.O. Bernard J. Bobinski Riverhead Police Department Training Division / C.I.R.T. 210 Howell Avenue Riverhead, New York 11901 (631) 727-4500 Ext. 348 Stay Safe! SOURCE: The Primary Source Material for this program was developed by the National Tactical Officers Associations and the Northeast Counterdrug Training Center NTOA P.O. Box 797 Doylestown, Pennsylvania 18901 (800) 279-9127 www.NTOA.Org NCTC Building 8-65 Fort Indiantown Gap Annville, PA 17003-5002 (877) 806-6293 www.counterdrug.Org
- 77. End of Program