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The Police Exam - Vehicle Pursuits
Sergeant George Godoy
4. The Number One factor studies have determined supporting vehicle pursuits is:
a) traffic and road conditions
b) offense committed by the suspect
c) volume, type, speed and direction of the traffic
d) officer ’s driving skill
The correct answer is b). Results of a study indicate that law enforcement personnel and members of the public focus on the severity of the offense committed by the suspect when supporting a pursuit. The second most important factor was the risk to the public (defined by traffic, road conditions, and the weather).
Restricted Pursuits
Some jurisdictions have very restrictive pursuit policies. For example, the Denver Police Department enacted a policy restricting vehicle pursuits and officers are not authorized to pursue vehicles that:
- are stolen or involved in non-violent crimes
- are simply fleeing
- are in violation of traffic laws
- are involved in hit and run accidents not involving death or serious injury
Due to the increase in lawsuits, many municipalities have enacted heavy restrictions on pursuits. However, a recent poll by the US Justice Department indicates that officer initiated vehicle pursuits are generally supported by the public as a quality crime fighting tool. 70% of those polled said pursuits were a necessary risk in the war on crime. Over half of those polled thought the decision to pursue should made by the officer and not restricted by department policy. Many experienced cops believe that over-restricting their ability to conduct vehicle pursuits, severely handcuffs their ability to do effective police work. They feel such restrictions give the bad guys another weapon against law enforcement.
Recap
Definition of Vehicle Pursuit – An active attempt by one or more police officers to apprehend a suspect who is operating a motor vehicle and trying to avoid capture. Suspect tactics may include driving at high-speeds and evasive tactics, such as driving off the roadway, making sudden or unexpected movements or maintaining a legal speed, but failing to yield to the officer’s signal to stop. Routine traffic stops or other instances where officers activate emergency lights and siren and the operator stops within a reasonably short distance are not a vehicle pursuit.
When answering common-sense questions about high-speed pursuits, consider this:
No assignment is of such importance and no task need be expedited with such speed, that the risk to public safety become secondary. No task undertaken in the official capacity of a police officer is of such importance to justify the reckless disregard of the officer’s safety, or the safety of others.
Before initiating a vehicle pursuit, an officer should determine if:
- The suspect presents a clear and immediate threat to the safety of others
- The suspect has committed or is attempting to commit a serious crime
- The necessity of immediate apprehension outweighs the level of danger created by pursuit
All emergency vehicle operations should be conducted in strict accordance with existing statutes. When engaged in any vehicle pursuit, an officer will simultaneously use the police vehicle emergency lights and siren.


Puffinbarger
about 1 month ago
448 Comments
good info
spastic
3 months ago
10 Comments
I think that everyone that is considering a career in law enforcement should definately take this exam,but before taking the exam they should look at the overview then take the quiz.It most definately helpful to take criminal justice courses as well to better understand the true aspects of what to exspect in the law enforcement field.
spastic
3 months ago
10 Comments
I Think that this is good information to know considering I am a Criminal Justice major at Indian River State College and working for the Indian River County Sheriffs department as a volunteer deputy in their general services department.
LCSL41
6 months ago
326 Comments
My department's pursuit policy is somewhat lenient. We are authorized to pursue any offender if they are, in fact, fleeing from justice for any violation of the law. As soon as a pursuit becomes too dangerous or unneeded we are to use our common sense and good judgement to either continue/discontinue.
JoelAHermanson
6 months ago
28 Comments
good info
Vigilant101
9 months ago
11206 Comments
Excuse me add to this to former post. It helps a lot to know the LAW!
Vigilant101
9 months ago
11206 Comments
This is so good. Basic and common sense applys. It takes experience to form a basic instint that requires action. Definitely a start. Thanks
shielding_wings
10 months ago
2 Comments
Im a student of Criminal justice at Itt-technical... funny thing is this is more helpful than the text on the related issues O.O
ehil
10 months ago
13142 Comments
This helped clarify a lot of questions I had!
rickykirkham
10 months ago
244 Comments
Great information. I just learned alot.
CValencia
about 1 year ago
10 Comments
This is a grate study guide "it's so easy"
cdizzle6984
about 1 year ago
2 Comments
ive seen too many high speed pursuits in my area many of them ending horribly, Like 2 of them have gone inot other ppls houses and killed them.
jayrichards12
about 1 year ago
8 Comments
I agree, it is too easy.
pdfl
about 1 year ago
4 Comments
wow, that is to easy to be the exam!
hbg522
about 1 year ago
5716 Comments
chase them until the wheels fall off!