Friday, March 1, 2019
Cjs 210 Week 6 Checkpoint
Reactive Patrol CJS/210 January 17, 2012 Michael Catanzarita Reactive Patrol As I read chapter seven Patrol and Traffic , I look that a reactive patrol is a form of random patrol. random patrol is said to be incident driven, or reactive, in that officers atomic number 18 responding to crimes only after they occur, either through rapid response to call(a)s for avail or to a violation or call in progress. collect to officer constantly moving it makes responding to these 911 calls easier and faster to respond. The specific activities an officer engages in while on random patrol vary signifi do-nothingtly across officers, times, locations, and departments, because much of the time spent on patrol is officer initiated (Grant & Terry, 2008). I also learned about proactive patrol which is known as a Directed patrol. A direct patrol focuses more on targeted hot spots, crime paradoxs, and/or offenders.Directed patrol addresses the problem-identification component of the problem solving process (Grant & Terry, 2008). Sometimes a directed patrol can occur on an informal level this may be when an officer regularly drives past hot spots during random wanderings or lay the squad car in a specific location when compose reports are examples of an informal level. If policing agencies adopted only one of these patrol styles it would be harder to have police discretion.The condition of officers reaction to trustworthy responds would change. If there was only reactive patrol officers would never be fitting to try to stop crimes before they happen. It would be wonderful to be sufficient to stop all crimes before they happen but in all actuality we know this is not possible and that is why we need reactive and proactive patrol to keep our streets safe. Reference Grant, H. B. , & Terry, K. J. (2008). Law Enforcement. Patrol and Traffic, 7(Chapter 7), 171-172.
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