Friday, March 23, 2012

Self Defense in the modern world

Date Line- Sanford Florida.

The news has been covering the story of a young man shot and killed by a local resident of this Florida town. The shooter killed the young man under the cover of the florida law of self defense known as the "Stand your Ground" Law.

The concept is easy enough. When you are in your home, your "Castle" and someone breaks in you have every right to defend yourself and your family from harm. You have a right  to stand your ground and do what you need to do to protect yourself. This is an idea that is time honored, even here in NJ where our laws tend towards a more liberal bent.

Outside the home on the other hand the idea of standing your ground has been abandon. Right to carry (Concealed weapons) laws are very restrictive and almost impossible to obtain in NJ. The idea of fighting back against a robber or assailant is acceptable as long as that fighting back does not result in a serious injury or death of your attacker. This concept owes itself to many, ever changing and evolving social norms in our society. As we get farther and farther away from our founding ideas and we become a much more progressive society the rule of thumb is "Dont fight back".

In states like Florida and other southern states, the older traditions, beliefs and thinking about self defense allows the average citizen more leeway in thier personal defense and in some areas to the defense of their property.

Floridas decision to send a message to the crimnal element: If you attack someone they can and will strike back with force and possibly with deadly force. This is a belief that harkens back to another era, one of self reliance.   A belief that each person as a citizen is entitled and empowered to protect themselves.

In the Saford Florida case, what seemed on its inital report as a situation where a man was protecting himself and killed his assailant, has morphed inot something else. The facts as they are now being revealed paint a different picture than I think the law was intended to address. I dont know the actual "Facts on the ground" I only know the stories being reported. Based on the new information it is beginning to feel like this was not a justified use of dealdy force. In any event a young man is dead and his family is left to suffer that pain. Hopefully all the facts will come out and justice will be done, which ever way the facts dictate.  If the man appropriately used force to protect himself then the lesson of the Florida law and the message the larger Florida residents are sending will be loud and clear: Attack someone and you can die. If the man was wrong in his actions then that lesson must be heralded as well: use deadly force inappropriately and you will suffer the consequences.

Weilding force in the name of self protection is a complicated legal question. In reality it is much simpler. If someone is trying to hurt you, you have every right to stop them from doing so. The problem is how do you stop it. A robber in a parking lot with a knife is a formidable problem to a person with only a wallet or cell phone to use in thier defense.
The concern we all have in rectifiying that balance by allowing people to carry concealed guns for their protection are the people that will use guns and dealy force in situations where it is not warranted. Shooting a neighbor after an argument over a fence, or after too many beers and a simple shoving match turns deadly. To avoid this we prevent everyone from possessing guns and going with the odds that only a few innocent, unarmed victims might be killed by criminals, as opposed to scores of improper shootings over less than life threatening situations.  This is fine as long as you or someone you love is not one of the sacrificial lambs. 

The other problem that looms in the background, as it does in the Florida case, is the question of race in these sitautions. This is the topic that we can not seem to come to grips with. It is so potentially dangerous and frought with difficulties, that we ignore it and can not bring our selves to have an open and honest discussion about it.

Those who see racism in every situation will point to any incidents involving people of different races involved in any type of situation and attribute the actions to racism, regardless of the facts.  Many other people will ignore racism when it is real and present in a situation so they can bolster their beliefs and make the facts fit. Either way we do not move ahead asa society, we become stuck in the mire. The only winnners here are the criminals. 

All of us want to be safe. All of us want to live a life of peaceful existence, to pursue our hopes and dreams with out being molested by crime. How we get there is a problem for all good and decent people. Unfortunately as we debate the most appropriate response to crime adn how to be just  and fair and not react more than is right, we put ourselves at the mercy of the criminals who give no thought to righteousness, justice, decency or respect for others.

More to come on this topic........ Let me know what you think.

     

   

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Hyperdrive Narcotics Investigation Training March 2012

March 15, 2012

One of the courses I teach is a drug investigation program called "Hyperdrive". The course is named for the speed at which narcotics investigation cases sometimes take place. A standard definition also includes" A state of constant action or ultimate speed".

Drug investigations are one of the hardest types of cases to work, there are lots of moving parts and the ever present danger of dealing with people involved in this lifestyle.

The class we ran this week at the Monmouth County Police Academy started on Monday and ended today. The course is built on teh premise of a real investigation. The morings are classroom session where we discuss the various aspects of a drug investigation. The second session of the day consists of the officer students using whhat they learned in the morning in practical exercises in the afternoon.

We learn about using informants, innterview techniques and types of investigations. The we bring in a role player to be interviewed and "vetted" by the class for credibility.

As the week progresses we cover all the parts of a case, buying drugs, conducting surveillance, writing search warrants and on the last day we conduct actual role player based raids on a location.
 
The course takes an officer from start to finish in a drug case and prepares them to run their own investigations. It is a fun class and from teh reviews it seems to be valuable to the officers too.
The group the we graduated today hailed from all over Monmouth, Middlesx and Union counties. I love teaching it and I really enjoyed meeting the cops who took the course.

These men and women are the future of police work. If I can do anything to prepare them and make them better cops then I am justified in my career.

If you want to see some video and photos from the course you can go to my business facebook page at Pangaro Training and Management or on You Tube looking for Pangaro Training.