The officers were captured on videos appearing to violate policies on how to use
force just days after Floyd died at the hands of Minneapolis police, setting
off nationwide protests.
With calls for police reforms across the U.S.,
instructors and researchers say officers lack sufficient training on how and
when to use force, leaving them unprepared to handle tense situations. Better
training can’t fix all the issues facing the nation’s police departments, but experts
believe it would have a big impact, reported the Associated Press.
“The skills are not taught well enough to be retained
and now the officer is scrambling to find something that works,” said William
Lewinski, executive director at Minnesota-based Force Science Institute, which
provides research, training and consulting to law enforcement agencies.
Its two-year study of three large U.S. police academies says skills
like using a baton or taking down an aggressive offender deteriorate
dramatically within two weeks.
A recent Associated Press investigation found
that a lack of firearms training has resulted in unintentional shootings by law
enforcement. It’s the same problem with use-of-force techniques, Lewinski said.
“Police officers across the country are woefully
undertrained,” said Sean Hendrickson, an instructor at Washington state’s
police academy in suburban Seattle.
The AP was invited to the facility to see use-of-force
training, a component of a 2012 federal agreement to reform the Seattle Police
Department after officers were found to routinely use excessive force. The
academy is considered one of the more progressive in the country for trying to
mirror what officers will face on the streets.
There’s classroom work, and cadets learn to combine
skills by play-acting scenarios. In an old building decorated to look like an
apartment, one officer plays the offender and others try to deescalate
tensions, take away his weapon and put him in handcuffs.
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