When Daryl Gates of the
Los Angeles Police Department
started championing the idea of an elite police unit based on elite military units back in the late 1960s, his superiors were less than enthused. They were especially unhappy about what Gates wanted to call the new unit: "Special Weapons and Assault Team." They didn't like the idea of a police "assault" team, so they compromised on the name, hence "Special Weapons and Tactics."
Not much has changed. LAPD brass is still trying to mold SWAT into a softer, gentler special unit that won't offend the politically correct sensibilities of community activists. But now for one of the few times in its distinguished history, SWAT is actually vulnerable to such pressure.
LAPD SWAT is probably the nation's most storied municipal police unit. This is the unit that slugged it out with the Black Panther Party, that ended the crime spree of the Symbionese Liberation Army in a fiery shootout, that inspired a hit TV show in the mid-1970s. It is made up of arguably the toughest, most athletic, most tactically savvy officers on the LAPD. It is also the law enforcement tactical team that serves as the model for most of the nation's other law enforcement teams.
Therefore, if you want to assess the state of SWAT nationwide, you have to begin with LAPD SWAT. And LAPD SWAT is currently a unit under fire.
LAPD SWAT was, until recently, in the eyes of many people, a unit composed of invincible heroes. After all, the team had never accidentally killed a hostage during a rescue and had never had an officer killed in action. But even heroes have bad days when fortune doesn't shine on them, and no human being is truly invincible.