I am a 73 y/o retired disabled LEO, and I am so very impressed with this particular presentation. It has given me a personal sense of gratification because during my career serving, after my Marine Corps enlistment, in three very diverse LE agencies (including NYPD) from 1976 to 1990, I routinely employed the clearly verbally stated “1, 2, 3 Count” before very rapid arrest. I am now very frustrated with all of the ludicrous TH-cam videos providing objective evidence, via body worn cameras, that the vast majority of similar case interactions show LEOs being indecisive, engaging in ludicrous conversations dominated by defendants, and essentially appearing afraid to take appropriate immediate remedial actions. Certainly this apparent trend in American LE must be corrected forthwith.
Thank you so much for your kind words and support! I think it is a combination of 2 things, 1) Young officers coming up grew up in a world of emojis and emoticons, and never really developed "people skills", and 2) Over the last 10 years the "police" have been so beat down and vilified that officers are hesitant to act decisively. Thanks again for the kinds words and please tell others about me!
@@GentleResponseLLC I am now personally very frustrated with all of the ludicrous TH-cam videos providing objective evidence, via body worn cameras, that the vast majority of similar case interactions show many LEOs being indecisive, engaging in ludicrous redundant conversations dominated by defendants, and essentially thus appearing afraid to take appropriate immediate remedial actions. I suspect the cameras must have an impact on discretionary processing in challenging encounters.
Good video John
Thank you, and thanks for taking a moment to comment!
I am a 73 y/o retired disabled LEO, and I am so very impressed with this particular presentation. It has given me a personal sense of gratification because during my career serving, after my Marine Corps enlistment, in three very diverse LE agencies (including NYPD) from 1976 to 1990, I routinely employed the clearly verbally stated “1, 2, 3 Count” before very rapid arrest.
I am now very frustrated with all of the ludicrous TH-cam videos providing objective evidence, via body worn cameras, that the vast majority of similar case interactions show LEOs being indecisive, engaging in ludicrous conversations dominated by defendants, and essentially appearing afraid to take appropriate immediate remedial actions.
Certainly this apparent trend in American LE must be corrected forthwith.
Thank you so much for your kind words and support! I think it is a combination of 2 things, 1) Young officers coming up grew up in a world of emojis and emoticons, and never really developed "people skills", and 2) Over the last 10 years the "police" have been so beat down and vilified that officers are hesitant to act decisively. Thanks again for the kinds words and please tell others about me!
@@GentleResponseLLC I am now personally very frustrated with all of the ludicrous TH-cam videos providing objective evidence, via body worn cameras, that the vast majority of similar case interactions show many LEOs being indecisive, engaging in ludicrous redundant conversations dominated by defendants, and essentially thus appearing afraid to take appropriate immediate remedial actions. I suspect the cameras must have an impact on discretionary processing in challenging encounters.