1st Edition

Guidelines for Investigating Officer-Involved Shootings, Arrest-Related Deaths, and Deaths in Custody

By Darrell L. Ross, Gary M. Vilke Copyright 2018
    336 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    336 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    As unrest over officer-involved shootings and deaths in custody takes center stage in conversations about policing and the criminal justice system, Guidelines for Investigating Officer-Involved Shootings, Arrest-Related Deaths, and Deaths in Custody addresses critical investigation components from an expert witness perspective, providing the insights necessary to ensure a complete investigation. Investigating a custodial death or an officer involved in a shooting presents unique and complex issues: estate, community, judicial, agency, involved officer, and public policy interests are all at stake. These types of deaths present various emerging medical, psychological, legal and liability, technical, and investigatory issues that must be addressed through a comprehensive investigation. This book is ideal for students in criminal investigation, death investigation, crime scene investigation, and special topic courses in custodial deaths and officer-involved shootings, as well as for death investigators, law enforcement officers, police administrators, and attorneys.

    Preface

    1. Arrest-Related Deaths, Emerging Questions, and Competing Expectations in Investigations

    Darrell L. Ross, Michael Brave, and Mark Kroll

    2. Vital Statistics and Arrest-Related Deaths

    Darrell L. Ross and Michael Brave

    3. Legal and Liability Issues Surrounding the Use of Force

    Darrell L. Ross

    4. Stress, Perceptional Distortions, and Human Performance

    Darrell L. Ross and Randall L. Murphy

    5. Memory and Decision Making Under Stress

    Alexis Artwohl

    6. Officer-Involved Incident Investigation Guidelines

    Darrell L. Ross and Mark S. Dunston

    7. Positional and Restraint Asphyxia

    Davut Savaser and Theodore C. Chan

    8. Neck Holds

    Michael Holman and Gary M. Vilke

    9. Excited Delirium Syndrome (ExDS)

    Christopher J. Coyne, Binh T. Ly, and Gary M. Vilke

    10. Amphetamines, Cathinones (Bath Salts), and Cocaine

    Stephen L. Thornton, Michael A. Darracq, and Binh T. Ly

    11. Central Nervous System Depressants

    Michael A. Darracq, Stephen L. Thornton, and Binh T. Ly

    12. Less Lethal Weapons, Not Including TASER

    Christian Sloane and Gary M. Vilke

    13. TASER—Conducted Electrical Weapons

    Mark W. Kroll and Michael A. Brave

    14. Custodial Deaths in Detention

    Darrell L. Ross

    15. Conducting the Investigative Interview

    R. Edward Geiselman, James F. Wilson, and Alexis Artwohl

    16. Effective Agency Response to the Media in Use of Force Incidents

    Todd A. Lough

    Index

    Biography

    Darrell L. Ross, Ph.D., is a Professor and Department Head of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminal Justice, and the Director of the Center for Applied Social Sciences (CASS) at Valdosta State University. Ross worked for the Michigan Department of Corrections as an officer, cell block supervisor of mentally impaired prisoners, probation officer, and instructor in the training academy. He also taught in the Police Academy at Ferris State University as a certified instructor teaching subject control techniques, mechanics of arrest, and responding to the mentally ill person. He directed the forensic science program at East Carolina University and served as the Director of the School of Law Enforcement and Justice Administration at Western Illinois University.

    Ross has published over 95 articles, books, book chapters, and monographs on the use of force, stress, and human factors during use-of-force incidents, liability issues, officer-involved shootings, excited delirium syndrome, prone restraint and asphyxiation, sudden arrest-related deaths, and custodial suicides. Ross has provided technical assistance and consultation to local, county, state, federal, and private criminal justice agencies nationally and internationally, as well as to various branches of the military. He regularly provides training to line-level officers and administrators and makes presentations at national and international conferences on officer-involved shootings, use-of-force issues, sudden arrest-related deaths, and custodial deaths. Since 1987, Ross has provided expert witness services regarding these and other topics.

    Gary M. Vilke, M.D., is a Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and is the former Medical Director for the County of San Diego Emergency Medical Services. Vilke served as the Director for Custody Services at UCSD for over 15 years and is the Director for Clinical Research for the Emergency Department. His research focus has been in the areas of prehospital care and in-custody deaths, and he has published over 215 original articles and 65 book chapters, including more than 50 articles on topics including positional asphyxia, weight force on the back, OC spray, neck holds, restraint chairs, excited delirium syndrome, and the TASER. He has lectured internationally on these topics. Additionally, he has over 35 grant-funded projects, including funding by several national organizations to perform research on in-custody deaths, including the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF), the Institute for the Prevention of In-Custody Deaths (IPICD), and the National Institute of Justice.

    The issue of deaths in police custody has become an important issue in criminology over the last decade, and concern about officer involved shootings has re-emerged in recent years… [Guidelines for Investigating Deaths in Custody] addresses major important topics in the field. --Robert Kaminski, Associate Professor, University of South Carolina

    I will purchase this book for my leadership programs and my command staff. The book will be a valuable resource, especially with case studies and checklists to support the main text. Case studies give the reader a vicarious experience that they will remember when facing similar circumstances. --Mark S. Dunston, Chief of Police, Ocean Springs P.D.