Threat Assessment and Training Blog
The Benefits of Certified Training
Good training can be hard to find. Before investing in a training program, organizations have to be sure that it will be an effective and efficient use of resources. This is especially true when agencies oftentimes have to budget for multiple costs – paying instructors, trainees, and insurance coverage. IADLEST’s National Certification Program can serve as a vehicle to identify good training. We recently renewed the certification for our online Threat Awareness for Law Enforcement Program, and we wanted to tell you more about what this means for you.
The 2024 Guide to Threat Assessment Approaches for Law Enforcement
An updated guide to threat assessment approaches for law enforcement, this guide is meant to define, provide resources, and also help you identify threat assessment training and resources that might help you, your officers, or your community.
School Threat Assessment and Identifying Active Threats
Lethal and non-lethal violent acts on school property are becoming more and more common, ranging from the most horrific shooting events to schoolyard fights. In this post, we will describe school threat assessment and the challenges associated with school safety. Also included are resources on critical topics. Lastly, we describe how active threat assessment and situational awareness training can help school personnel prevent violence.
Threat Assessment Training: Identify and Defend Against Your Threat
The type of threat assessment you need may vary based on the type of problem you are trying to solve. In this post, we share various research and resources related to threat assessment training and our own active threat assessment methodology.
Active Threat Assessment: Identify Potential, Imminent, and Immediate Threats
Active threat assessment is an observation methodology that can help you identify threatening individuals or groups who require immediate attention while dismissing people who don’t present a true threat. This method involves systematic observations, recognizing people who deviate from the pattern of consistent behavior, and identifying persons of interest (POI) who warrant further investigation. This methodology can also help you assess threat indicators, which can help you conduct safe and effective interdictions with POIs when necessary.
Threat Assessment and Active Shooter Prevention
As the prevalence of active shooter incidents continues to increase, the need for active shooter prevention and preparedness is becoming more relevant. There are a number of things that organizations can do to prepare for and respond to these types of incidents. Some are proactive and focus on active shooter prevention, while others are short-term and help officers better respond to these incidents. For example, threat assessment can be used to identify different threats that come up at different points in time. In this post, we explain some of these options and help you find resources that might help you.
Active Threat Assessment In Action: Concealed Weapons at Protests
Recently, a Second Sight trainee used the active threat assessment techniques to spot people carrying concealed weapons at a peaceful protest. Read this story.
Before Defensive Tactics: 5 Training Approaches for LE-Citizen Encounters (Part II)
There are a number of training approaches recommended to heal police-community tensions, including procedural justice, implicit bias, de-escalation, and CIT. These approaches involve assessment, decision-making, and communication. In the second of this two-part series, we focus on de-escalation and crisis intervention training.
Before Defensive Tactics: 5 Training Approaches for LE-Citizen Encounters (Part I)
There are a number of training approaches recommended to heal police-community tensions, including procedural justice, implicit bias, de-escalation, and CIT. These approaches involve assessment, decision-making, and communication. In the first of this two-part series, we focus on procedural justice and implicit bias training.
Should All Training Be Online?
Online training is not a panacea. It is not a replacement for instructor-led training. But there are distinct benefits, and downsides, to each type of training delivery.
Measuring Threat Assessment Skills – Evaluating Knowledge Gain
We all know that some trainings are required and “buts in seats” may be the only thing that matters. In other cases, you may want to makes sure your officers learned something. This is why we evaluate. The second level of training evaluation is learning – assessing measurable skills that a trainee takes away from a course.
Keep Your Eyes on the Prize: Active Police Threat Assessment Training from Observation to Interdiction
In police threat assessment training, and any form of training that involves interaction with people, it is important that it incorporates the human interaction and safety component associated with an interdiction. This doesn’t necessarily apply to all forms of threat assessment (other than active threat assessment), but is relevant in defensive tactics, verbal communication, or any training that involves police interaction with the public.
What Should Alice Be Watching For In That Looking Glass? Context in Threat Identification and Assessment
Assessing patterns of consistent behavior is the key to threat identification and assessment. Learn about assessing patterns of consistent behavior, or the behavioral baseline, and how this leads to active threat assessment.
The Origin Story of Active Threat Assessment for Law Enforcement: The Identifying Threats Program
Learn about the origin of active threat assessment for law enforcement through the Just Doesn’t Look Right Project and the Identifying Threats Training Program.
Using Their Reactions Against Them: Identifying Active Threats Through Behavioral Change
Learn more about why timing of observations matter and how active threats respond to your officers in our most recent blog post.
The 411 on JDLR and what it means for identifying active threats
The United States Department of Defense-funded Just Doesn’t Look Right (JDLR) Project was undertaken to transfer tactics, techniques, and procedures to identify active threats from veteran to inexperienced military, law enforcement, and security personnel. Get the 411 from the head researchers on the JDLR Project and what this research means for active threat assessment.
The Importance of Active Threat Assessment: A Focus on Vocabulary
Your officers have a “lingo” they use when communicating. This lingo, vocabulary, or glossary of terms allows them to quickly and efficiently talk to one another. Without this threat assessment vocabulary, it will take them longer to transmit information, give and receive orders, and may result in miscommunication.