Keeping your mind ready for anything is especially important when contacting pedestrians on the street or suspects on their own turf. What if they were to run away, or fight, or even pull a weapon? Are you ready for anything? Here are a few reminders designed to help keep your mind ready when contacting a suspect.
Be Ready For Flight
Suspects tend to know when they will run way before we ever contact them on the street. At the first sight of the police car, their "fight or flight" reflex is telling them to take off. Still, many will play it cool and wait it out to see whom they're dealing with, or what the officer wants. Sometimes (and we've all done it), an officer will fail to run someone for warrants due to the nature of the stop. Most suspects know this, so they'll stay put and wait it out to gauge your response.
Once they know you're going to run them, or once they hear you say their name into your radio, the whole game changes. At that point, your detainee isn't thinking about if he should run, he's thinking where he should run, and when. Does he wait until his warrant comes back and you know about it, or does he take off early leaving you wondering what happened? Regardless of what he decides, make sure you're ready for it. The best way to do this is to be ready in every contact you make, however small it may seem. Remember, it may be a small contact to you, but to the parolee who just committed another robbery that you aren't yet aware of, it's his whole world.
When you make a pedestrian stop, think of which ways would be the easiest for the suspect to get away. What are those escape routes? Where do they lead? If he were to run one of those ways, how would you stop him? Thinking of these things before every stop will get your mind into the habit of being prepared, and you'll begin to do it automatically. It also makes it a ton easier when someone does run on you, and your demeanor will tell lots of these suspects that you mean business.