I give you this background because it is central to my story. It is also important to know that the task force is a temporary entity, focusing on the highest, most violent crime areas in the city. The officers assigned to the task force were chosen from the divisions within our area of operations. Their mission is to support the divisions through aggressive crime suppression.
A few weeks ago, a call came out of a 211 PC (robbery) in progress. When I arrived at the scene, a patrol sergeant from the division in which we were working was just coming out of the business that had been robbed. He related to me that his units and our task force units had arrived nearly simultaneously on a robbery in progress. Two suspects were in custody; a gun, money, ski masks, and property were also in custody. He stated, "Great teamwork between your guys and ours. This is a great arrest." I asked him who was handling and he told me that a patrol unit had the radio call and was already getting started on a field showup and collecting witness statements. Patrol units had chased and captured the suspects and a task force unit recovered a gun. "OK," I said. "Since you seem to be ahead of the game, you take it and we will give you a hand."
What I didn't know at the time was that two of the task force officers, Gonzalez and Aguirre, had actually been flagged down by a citizen and notified of the crime prior to the radio call being sent. They had initially set up on the location and started directing responding units. The cultural norm for our department is that the first officers take the paper.
After the suspects ran from the location, Gonzales and Aguirre helped to clear the location and then went to identify the robbers two blocks away.
Needless to say, when they returned, Gonzalez and Aguirre were upset at having their caper snagged out from underneath them. Now I was in a quandary. But after thinking about it, I decided to stick with my initial decision and let patrol handle it. My reasoning was as follows: