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Recommendations of the Committee on the Use of Less Than Lethal Force by Police Officers in British Columbia

NCJ Number
130427
Author(s)
J P Jamieson; R Hull; P Battershill
Date Published
1990
Length
56 pages
Annotation
A task force examined alternatives to the use of deadly force by police in British Columbia and recommended ways to use these options.
Abstract
Information was gathered from municipal police agencies in British Columbia, other police agencies in Canada and the United States, site visits to six training programs in the United States, and interviews with criminologists and communications instructors. The analysis showed that police training in British Columbia uses the incremental model involving five or six levels of increasing force. In contrast, major agencies in the United States use a situational model, in which the police officer is trained to choose the appropriate, least violent option for the particular situation. Seventeen types of less-than-lethal alternatives exist; many of these appear appropriate for use in British Columbia or are already being used. These include tactical communications training, side handle batons, capsicum (an organic extract of cayenne pepper), stunning explosives, tear gas, and capsicum grenades. Adding these approaches and providing the appropriate training will cost money now but will save a large amount of suffering and cost later. Diagrams and 193 references