Categories
Ramblings by Hal Street Stories

Ramblings: Officer Involved Shooting

It was a clear day and my shift was going well. I was a field sergeant, but I was asked to sit in as the Watch Commander (W/C) while the W/C and assistant W/C attended a meeting. I settled into the W/C’s seat and noted that I was in command of the entire Hollywood Patrol Division. If something big happened in Hollywood, it was soon to be world news. It was nearing the end of my 12-hour shift. What could possibly go wrong?

By Hal Collier, Retired LAPD

It was a clear day and my shift was going well. I was a field sergeant, but I was asked to sit in as the Watch Commander (W/C) while the W/C and assistant W/C attended a meeting. I settled into the W/C’s seat and noted that I was in command of the entire Hollywood Patrol Division. If something big happened in Hollywood, it was soon to be world news. It was nearing the end of my 12-hour shift. What could possibly go wrong? I had a very competent officer sitting to my left who often helped me handle the numerous calls meant for the Watch Commander. I bought myself a diet Coke for that late afternoon caffeine pick me up and settled into a game of FreeCell on the computer. I have to stay mentally sharp in case I’m asked to make a decision. Little chance, right?

I suddenly remembered that I last peed before roll call about 9 hours ago. Cops develop bladders the size of a basketball. Imagine being on a stake out or perimeter search and holding up a finger asking for a potty break.

So, I’m losing this game of FreeCell and make my last good command decision of the day.

I went pee. I casually walked back into the W/C office thinking the world would continue to spin. The young officer calmly said, “Hey sarge, you should see this message that came through the ACC (a computer in W/C’s office).”

I told him print it out.

I sat down take a sip of my still cold diet Coke. Now an OIS (Officer Involved Shooting) is so important that the department basically mobilizes. Everyone wants to be notified and half of those respond to the scene. No kidding. It was rumored that an OIS was better investigated than a homicide. An OIS doesn’t have to include shooting at another human being. An OIS might be an “aw shit” in the locker room where you accidently pull the trigger and put a hole through the next three lockers. It also might be during a foot pursuit when you trip, and your handgun goes off. No matter who or why you have an OIS everyone above the rank of rookie wants to be notified. I read the printout and an officer has fired his Berretta 9mm at a dog. Ok, not as important as shooting at a human being but still pretty serious.

My brain shifted into high gear. Notifications need to be made! I send my loyal officer to the roll call room with a print out of the OIS. He passes the notice to the Assistant W/C. The AW/C comes down to the W/C office and confirms the information on the print out. Yes, we have an OIS! The AW/C goes back to the roll call room and advises the Watch Commander who interrupts the Captain with the news. The meeting is immediately cancelled. See? An OIS is a big deal.

In the meantime, I scrambled to make notifications. I called a Use of Force Investigation—the detectives who investigate all use of force’s.

The officer who answered the phone asked, “What do you have?”

I reply, “I have an OIS!” He told me to stand by while he got the OIS form.

The next 5 minutes I answered questions. I move on to the next notification.

The Chief of Police, same scenario: “Wait a minute. I have to get the OIS form.”

Another 5 minutes pass but I’m used to the formalities that everyone wants to be in the loop.

My next notification was West Bureau. LAPD is divided into four bureaus and Hollywood in in West Bureau. Guess what? “Hold on a minute while I get the OIS form.” After 20 minutes of answering the same questions, I felt I’d done a pretty good job of making notifications. I can now return to my Diet Coke and game of Free Cell.

Two days later I’m the real Watch Commander when I got called into the Captain’s office. I suddenly get a chill when the captain closes the door.

I spent the next 20 minutes listening to my captain chew my ass out because West Bureau was notified 20 minutes late of the OIS. When it was finally my turn to talk, I went through my notification scenario, telling him the delay was possibly due to me taking a pee brake on city time.

The OIS was two officers responded to a Radio Call. When they walked to the house a large dog charged at the officers and they retreated to their car. The dog outran the officers and one officer fired one shot at the dog. The dog was last seen running west bound through the houses. Unknown if the dog was hit. PETA was not notified.

I was not written up for my lack of only being able to talk to one person at a time. I left the Captain’s office and started a new FreeCell game.

Hal

By Thonie Hevron

Mysteries to keep you reading through the night.

5 replies on “Ramblings: Officer Involved Shooting”

Please excuse the above…Hal times certainly change, Night watch 1957, radio car. Chase stolen car 2-3 blocks everyone bails out. My partner chases driver, I go after one passenger. I hear distant shots
[2]. I stop my chase and look for my partner who tells me he shot at car thief and missed. Request a Sgt, none available, come in and make ”shots fired report”,,,,,,,,,That was it

Wow. What a difference between a large Metropolitan PD and a rural Sheriff’s Dept. I had been a Sgt. for a whole 6 months on dayshift. One Saturday my Lt. called me from his home and told me he was talking the day off and appointed me acting Watch Commander.
Around noon a Deputy was sent to a suspicious circumstances call. No further details other than an animal was involved and animal control wasn’t available.
The Deputy called me and said he had a possible rabid fox cornered in a rural backyard and it was drooling and snapping at anyone within 10 feet.
I asked him one question; is there a backstop for your bullets in case you miss or the bullet perforated the fox. Answer; a mound of dirt. Told him to use the shotgun for a one shot solution and write a report on the discharge not to exceed 2 paragraphs. Animal dispatched immediately and 2 paragraph incident report submitted. End of story.

Hal,
A minor point I took from your story; one that I passed-on to rookies coming out of the academy. A valuable lesson I learned as a Huey pilot in Vietnam and one carried-over to my days as a LA Policeman… always eat and pee (not necessarily in that order) whenever you have the chance, even if you are not hungry or need to go. Because it never fails that when the stomach growls or the bladder is about to burst, “IT will hit the fan.”

Hal,
My first night as a new Lt. No field sgts, had to use a P-3 as 4L20 that night. Coming down from roll call, an OIS down near General Hosp. Fortunately, Day Watch was just coming in for the Change of watch. I grabbed Sgt. Steve Neilsen and off we go. I did what a watch commander is supposed to do, set up a Command Post. I did the smart thing a chose the parking lot of a do-nut shop. All went well and Steve did a great job plus he got OT

Mike Nichol

Good to see you at it again pard. Keep’em coming!! BTW, we did have a great time in HWD, it was a 10 year hoot!!!

Leave a Reply to lapd17027Cancel reply

Discover more from Thonie Hevron Author

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading