THIS CLASS WAS CANCELED AND RESCHEDULED FOR MARCH 10, 2021
A crucial question at the core of every use of force incident is this:
Was it avoidable? This course helps you make that decision.
The 1989 the Graham v. Connor case established that the moment an officer uses force is all that matters when determining if it was objectively reasonable. Further it determined that the moment could not be judged “with the 20/20 vision of hindsight.” In other words, how that moment came to be matters not, only what was happening during it.
That said, this legal doctrine does not (and should not) preclude officers, trainers and supervisors from examining cases with that 20/20 vision. With a goal of avoiding the avoidable, we should look backward from the moment force was used and honestly assess whether the officer, by action or lack of action, contributed to its ultimate need.
Legally Justified; But Was it Avoidable analyzes dozens of recent use of force videos and focuses on the totality of the interaction. We dissect the behavior of the offender and more importantly, the thoughts and behavioral processes of the officer(s) involved. Specifically, we consider if poor or ill-advised tactics, ineffective communication, a lack of personal control and/or a misunderstanding of acute stress led the officer(s) to escalate the event unintentionally and unconsciously.
In this course we will discuss:
Date: October 7, 2020 Time: 8am – 5pm
Location: Delta College, 1961 Delta Road, Room G-160
University Center, MI 48710 (GPS users may want to use Bay City)
Cost: LEORTC licensed members-prepaid
Delta Members – $165
All others-$195
Delta College Consortium members register at www.delta.edu/policeacademy or call (989) 686-9176