In recent years, law enforcement has increasingly used multi-agency task forces, regional SWAT teams, mutual aid programs, and intra-agency cooperation against criminals who are mobile, with far-reaching tentacles. Consequently, SWAT finds itself increasingly working with non-SWAT personnel, which is contrary to our long-standing aversion to “mix and match.”
“Blackhawk Down” with its multi-branch Task Force Ranger, galvanized into a single entity working as one to win is an example that all of us should study. When the fight was on, all previous identity differences and rivalries between the Rangers, Delta Force, 10th Mountain Division, and even the Air Force evaporated.
The same thing has happened in law enforcement operations. During the North Hollywood shootout, LAPD SWAT dropped everything and raced through heavy traffic to the aid of their patrol comrades. It’s hard to forget the image of the SWAT operator who took action still wearing his gym shorts. That day, regardless of assignment, every LAPD officer on the scene fought with a single purpose to win and survive against two determined suspects with superior firepower.
Although law enforcement is not the military, when it comes to combat and shootouts, surviving and prevailing is our mission and our goal. This means SWAT, patrol, detectives, and other officers find themselves in the same boat.
Therefore, it is in everyone’s mutual best interest to forge a working relationship of trust with other law enforcement entities, both inside and beyond their own agencies. Trust is the product of treating others with dignity and respect, and it is developed by working, training, and fighting together. The time to accomplish this is before, not during or after, critical incidents.