Tuesday, May 27, 2014

What is Use of Force?



By: Dr. Peter A. Barone, Esq., Ph.D.


What do we mean and what are we speaking of when we keep hearing and referring to Police Use of Force or Excessive Use of Force?

                               What Exactly Do We Mean by Use of Force?

There are statutes in each state and policies and guidelines defining what use of force is considered to be and how and when it is supposed to be used throughout the world in various states, countries and law enforcement agencies. Even the military has protocols on when force can be used and not sued depending on the type of action and location of that particular action. When examining police use of force it is observed that this very controversial topic and activity is characterized in a variety of ways. Sometimes, these characterizations are functionally interchangeable so that one can be substituted for another without doing injustice to the factual interpretation of a statement. At other times, however, differences in terminology can be very consequential to a statement’s meaning. As an example of this it is seen that “deadly force” refers to situations in which force is likely to have lethal consequences for the victim it is being administered against by someone one and when involving law enforcement it pertains directly to the officers actions. This type of force is clearly defined and should not be confused with other types of force that police use and it is also addressed in state statutes in addition to departmental policies, procedures, general orders and operating procedures.

When examining use of force it is important to also discuss “excessive force” which is
a term used to describe situations in which more force is used than is allowable when judged in terms of administrative or professional guidelines or legal standards. There is a proportionality of force which is needed to be used in direct response to the force that is being presented by the subject or assailant. The judgment of the response of the type and amount of force employed by the law enforcement officer at the time of the incident must be examined and assessed using a totality of the circumstances approach to provide a true and accurate understanding of what the officer involved in the incident experienced in making their decision as to what level of force they deemed necessary and proper as a response to the threat and force directed at them or someone else. Criteria for judging excessive force are fairly well established. The term may also include within its meaning the concept of illegal force.

What is Illegal Use of Force?

“Illegal” use of force refers to situations in which use of force by police violated a law or statute, generally as determined by a judge or magistrate subsequent to the action having taken place. The criteria for judging illegal use of force are fairly well established and would again involve the use of the totality of the circumstances criteria.  

When examining allegations of Improper, Abusive, Illegitimate, and Unnecessary use of force it is observed that these are terms that describe situations in which an officer’s authority to use force has been mishandled in some general way, the suggestion being that administrative procedure, societal expectations, ordinary concepts of lawfulness, and the principle of last resort have been violated.

Why do Police Use Force?

When examining the role and mission of law enforcement, it is seen that the primary purpose of police is protection and the maintenance of social control in society. In keeping with this objective and commission law enforcement officials have been approved to use force; however, the use of this force can be used only to promote the safety of the community and not with malice but with a specific purpose to a specific and justifiable end. Police have a responsibility for safeguarding the domestic well-being of the public, and this obligation even extends in qualified ways to protecting those who violate the law, who are antagonistic or violent toward the police, or who are intent on  hurting themselves. These activities are seen by officers throughout the world on a daily basis. In dealing with such individuals, police may use force in reasonable and prudent ways to protect themselves and others which is inline with their commission and oath to promote the safety of the community and maintain social control. However, the amount of force used should be proportional to the threat being presented to and against them or others and the amount of force employed by law enforcement should be limited to the least amount required to accomplish legitimate police objectives; which should be to stop the existing threat and return to the original homeostasis of the day.

It is interesting to note that in a study conducted by Bayley and Garofalo (1987) they advised that their data revealed that police-citizen encounters that involve use of force and injury are “quite rare.” In another study conducted by Garner and Maxwell (1996) the results of their data revealed that the use by law enforcement officers of physical force (excluding handcuffing) was used in less than one of five adult custody arrest. An assessment of this figure does not truly qualify use of force as, it must be considered low, especially in light of the broad definition of force that was used and especially when considering the entire spectrum of force with mere grabbing an individual on one end and the use of deadly force at the other end of the spectrum. This being said it is very important that society to correctly place police use of force in context in order to truly understand the true vista of the potential magnitude of use-of force issues.

How Often are the Various Types of Police Use of Force Implemented by Law Enforcement?

Research by Alpert and Dunham (2004) and also by this writing indicates that police are most likely to use force when pursuing a suspect, attempting to exercise their arrest powers and when presented with a dangerous confrontational situation by a suspect. Furthermore, resistance by the public increases the likelihood that police will use force. These findings appear intuitively sound given the mandate that police have regarding use of force. Police may use force when it is necessary to enforce the law or to protect themselves or others from harm and if the person the police are interacting with does not escalate the situation then law enforcement has not need to escalate the situation. This writer again refers back the study conducted by Bayley and Garofalo (1987) where they advised that their data revealed that police-citizen encounters that involve use of force and injury are “quite rare.”

What are the Types of Use of Force Used by Police?

When reviewing various texts and articles it is vividly demonstrated that and known with substantial confidence that police use of force typically occurs at the lower end of the force spectrum and is usually involving the grabbing, pushing, or shoving of an individual who has not complied with an officers requests or orders and who has brought the situation to the officer. In the study, by the NIJ (1999) which focused on 7,512 adult custody arrests, 80 percent of arrests in which police used force involved use of weaponless tactics. The study indicated that the tactic of grabbing was the tactic used about half the time by law enforcement personnel during encounters. The study further demonstrated that approximately 2.1 percent of all arrests which were affected law enforcement officers involved the use of weapons by police. The study also indicated that chemical agents, such as pepper spray, were the weapons that were most frequently used (1.2 percent of all arrests). As relates to firearms the study showed that only (0.2) of the times officers used firearms; which makes the firearm the weapon least often used by law enforcement during use of force situations (NIJ, 1999).  

What Types of Weapons Did the Suspect Use?

There is an interesting contrast in the study conducted by the San Diego County Districts Attorney’s Office in San Diego California involving the types of weapons used by the perpetrators of crimes that law enforcement had to deal with while performing their duties indicated that suspects used firearms some  In this study the data reflected that 42% of the suspects used handguns; 19 suspects used knifes; 8 suspects used blunt or sharp force objects and 13% of the suspects used motor vehicles against the law enforcement officers (OIS Study 2006). An assessment of these figures indicates again that the suspect is the initiator of the activities and the officers are responding to the situation and activities presented to them by the perpetrators.

                                                             Conclusion

The use of force by law enforcement officers in the performance of their duty is one of the most serious actions that officers have to take, and this is especially true when the suspects forces the situation to require an officer to have to resort to deadly force to stop the threat being presented to them. All of the aforementioned areas addressed in this writing truly need to be pondered and considered before comments and judgment are made by someone not being presented with the situation requiring a response necessitating use of force. It must be also remembered that law enforcement officers are facing situations where individuals are in possession of storms of emotions that accompany human interaction and come forth uncontrollably especially during human confrontation. The main reason these officers find themselves in these hail storms of emotion and violent actions is because their primary role is to protect life and maintain social control.

                                                            References 

Alpert, G.P. &  Dunham, R.G., (2004). Understanding Police Use of Force: Officers, Suspects, and Reciprocity. Cambridge University Press.

Bayley, D. H., & Garofalo, J. (1987). “Patrol Officer Effectiveness in Managing Conflict During Police-Citizen Encounters.” In a Report to the New York State Commission on Criminal Justice and the Use of Force (Vol. III), May pp. B1 – 81.

Gardner, J.H. & Maxwell, C.D., (1996). Measuring the Amount of Force Used by and Against the Police in Six Jurisdictions.  Cambridge University Press.

National Institute of Justice (1999). Use of Force by Police: Overview of National and Local Data. U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs.

Officer Involved Shooting Review: Analysis of Cases Investigated by the San Diego County District Attorneys Office 1996 – 2006.

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Police Use of Force and Officer Involved Shootings


Dr. Peter A. Barone, Esq. Ph.D. is going to be posting a large number of papers on this blog pertaining to Police Use of Force and Officer Involved Shootings due to the unrealistic and unreasonable complaints being presented by various parts of the community and their ignorance of use of force and the need to use various levels of deadly force.