By John C. Hunter
Chief Deputy Hunter serves with the Skagit County, Washington, Sheriff's Office.
A deputy sheriff responds to a reported domestic dispute in a rural area of the county. Backup officers are 20 minutes behind when the deputy passes one of the subjects speeding in the opposite direction. After a short pursuit, the subject stops his vehicle and flees on foot. The deputy confronts the man, and a physical struggle ensues. Although not assaultive, the subject escapes when the deputy cannot effectively control him.
In another part of the country, officers take part in a multivehicle pursuit as a suspect attempts to avoid apprehension. The suspect eventually stops his vehicle, but refuses to comply with the officers' verbal commands to lie face down. After attempts of physical restraint fail, officers resort to tasers and repeated baton blows. A bystander captures on video what appears to be the officers' flagrant disregard for the citizen's safety.
Meanwhile, officers from another department transport a mental patient from a detention facility to the hospital. Because the subject will not sit calmly in the backseat of the patrol vehicle, the officers hogtie him. When they arrive at the hospital after a 5-minute drive, the officers find the subject dead in the back seat. A subsequent coroner's report lists the cause of death as positional asphyxia.1
These incidents reveal a paradox in modern policing. For the most part, the officers acted in accordance with their departments' training procedures. However, each of these encounters ultimately produced results unacceptable both to their departments and to the communities they serve. In fact, each of these scenarios reflects a missing link that exists in the use-of-force continuum currently recognized and accepted by law enforcement.
What makes scenarios such as these especially frustrating is that they could be resolved without placing either the subjects or the officers in jeopardy. Advances in nonlethal neutralizing agents--most notably oleoresin capsicum, or "pepper spray"--give today's law enforcement officers a means to control subjects without resorting to a physical confrontation or to the deadly force level of the force continuum.
Although an increasing number of departments equip their officers with pepper spray, other agencies have been slow to embrace this alternative to more conventional methods of subject control. Considering the many challenges facing modern law enforcement officers, agency administrators should consider the potential advantages of expanding the use-of-force continuum to include pepper spray.
While this model adequately reflects the methods available to police departments in past years, it does not accommodate the expanded arsenal of neutralizing agents available to today's law enforcement officers. Therefore, administrators and trainers should consider modifying the continuum to encompass these measures.
The new use-of-force continuum should include two additional levels and appear as such:
As reflected in this new model, neutralizing agents, such as pepper
spray, can give officers an added degree of flexibility at two
critical points in the force continuum--before they make any
physical contact with subjects or after initial physical
contact but before the introduction of hand-held weapons.
The spray is an organically based inflammatory agent derived from the essence of cayenne peppers. Its ingredients are generally 90 to 95 percent inert, making it safe for use at very close range.
After being exposed to the spray, subjects' reactions become reflexive in nature. They immediately cover their eyes and bend over into a defensive posture to avoid further contact. This reactive behavior allows officers to gain control and restrain disorderly subjects more effectively. The effects of the spray generally last about 20 to 45 minutes and leave no residual effects.
One advantage of pepper spray is that it can be applied to handcuffed, resistant, and violent persons during transport, in lieu of the hogtying method. Contamination of vehicles is minimal. Generally, vehicles can be operated within a few minutes after the spray has been used. After use, no decontamination procedures are required other than normal cleaning of the vehicle's interior.
Like any weapon, pepper spray should not be assumed to be risk-free. At least one death has been attributed to the application of pepper spray. Although pre-existing medical conditions may have contributed to the subject's death, the coroner's report cites pepper spray as a significant factor.3
Still, compared to using batons and tasers in marginal use-of-force scenarios, pepper spray generally represents a more acceptable level of force. In fact, because the spray forces subjects to assume a prone position without officers resorting to physical contact, departments that train their personnel in the proper use of pepper spray can significantly limit their vulnerability to lawsuits.
The low probability of civil liability rests with the effectiveness of officer training procedures. An important element of this training includes exposing officers to the effects of pepper spray.
This accomplishes two important goals. The first addresses officers' ability to react if exposed during an actual field situation. Officers should be aware of the physical reactions to the agent. The second goal involves developing a history of the product's reliability and safety. Courts may be more willing to side with law enforcement officers who have themselves been exposed to the spray and survived with minimal short-term discomfort.
Among other considerations, training should also stress that officers move away quickly after spraying a subject. This is to ensure that the subject does not grab the officer when reacting to the spray.
After the initial instruction, agencies should conduct yearly inservice training. However, this training can be reduced to an informal update at little or no cost to the agency.
2 While pepper spray is widely accepted in the law enforcement community, it still remains illegal in certain areas of the country. Police administrators should consult with their legal advisors before employing this neutralizing agent.
3 Report of Autopsy Examination # ME-93-658, Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.