"It had no budget, really," says Allen, a SWAT supervisor and 18-year veteran of the department. "Most of the guys made their own tac vests. They had some shotguns, some seized weapons. Some of the stuff was given by the military, back in the day."
Today, Tucson SWAT consists of 40 officers, four supervisors, and one lieutenant. Each team member also has a specialty assignment, as a sniper, tactical medic, chemical and less-lethal munitions expert, explosives breacher, or covert operator. Team members are also cross-trained in other specialty areas, including deployment of light-sound distraction devices (flash-bangs) and operation of armored personnel carrier rescue vehicles. SWAT officers train twice a month on department time and receive specialized training as needed.
All of that training and team building pays great dividends for the Tucson PD. The team is operationally deployed an average of 180 to 200 times for barricade incidents, high-risk arrests and warrant services, counter-sniper operations, hostage rescue, buy-bust narcotics operations, and active shootings. The team also assists with riot control and VIP protection details for visiting dignitaries.
Tucson is located less than an hour from the Mexican border, and the team has become especially adept at dealing with violence stemming from the international narcotics trade. The city is a major distribution point for cocaine, methamphetamine, and other drugs, and officers frequently encounter heavily armed security forces at local stash houses-as well as toxic/potentially explosive meth cookhouses, numerous narco-related kidnappings, and high-firepower rip-offs among rival drug organizations.
Since 1992, the year he joined the team, Allen has been on 700-plus SWAT deployments. A recent callout, which was resolved before the team arrived, involved a slow-speed, cross-town chase of a 40-ton construction earthmover with a disturbed 14-year-old boy at the controls.