This report defines "pursuit" as "an active attempt by a law enforcement officer on duty in a patrol car to apprehend one or more occupants of a moving motor vehicle, providing the driver of such vehicle is aware of the attempt and is resisting apprehension by maintaining or increasing his speed or by ignoring the law enforcement officer's attempt to stop him." Policy and liability issues associated with such pursuit are identified. The examination of pursuit policies in four police jurisdictions focuses on the policy rationale; radio communications; pursuit termination; boxing-in, ramming, and roadblocks; firearms; aircraft rules; alternatives to pursuit; interjurisdictional rules; supervisory role; and review procedures. The report recommends that four major elements constitute an agency's pursuit policy: a specific pursuit directive, training, alternatives to high-speed pursuit, and a review process. 39 notes.
Downloads
Similar Publications
- An Assessment of the Impact of a Multipronged Approach to Reducing Problematic Pain Clinics in Florida
- “They had to change the model to fit the victim, versus the victim having to fit the model”: Innovative solutions in community response to commercial sexual exploitation
- Structuring Justice: How Prosecutorial Offices Handle Hate Crime Detection and Prosecution