
WHAT IS THE SQUAD ROOM?
As I prepare writings for this site, and due to the time lapse between posting, I feel it a good time to review the objective of what is it that you can expect here on this site.
Our place as investigators is often thought of as a special calling.
Our Squad Room – wherever that may be – is a special place.
It’s where we spend a large part of our life. It’s a place where we feel comfortable enough to joke around with others, and then to have a serious discussion on an investigative objective. It’s the place where we learn to be a detective – we learn from others around us, we learn from those we deal with outside our commands, and we learn from ourselves. We grow in our role as a Detective – a professional investigator – ion our Squad Rooms.
Work should be fun, as a wise commander once said. This is no different today.
Heck, we probably spend more time in a given week in our Squad Room’s then we do in our own living rooms at home!
The Squad Room – this particular blog – is intended to be a place to share ideas on what detectives do, information on items of current interest, and a place to “learn how to be a Jedi”.
It’s important to understand your history- what went on “here”, in these Squad Rooms, years before. To understand where you are now and look at where you are going you have to know where you came from. History is often entertaining; as we look back at history as we know it, those who are just coming out of the Academy today and who will occupy our seats in these Squad Rooms ten, fifteen and twenty years from now will find what we are doing today to be “historical” interest. We live in history.
Entertain, pass along some ideas on what we do and how we may be able to do it better, to learn about our past with an insight on where we are going, that’s what I will try to continue to put together here, on this blog, in The Squad Room. Your Squad Room.
Travel anywhere in the world- guaranteed if you sit and talk with the local police detective you will find shared issues, shared interests, shared frustrations; perhaps in a different language, but I am sure you will find A Detective is a Detective no matter what country’s flag they fly.
Welcome to The Squad Room. Have a cup of coffee.
NEVER SAY, “NEVER” – NEVER SAY, “ALWAYS”
In life there are few positives and/or negatives. The investigator deals with the human element and should expect any type of behavior, rational or irrational, logical or illogical. If the investigator keeps this in mind, she/he will have the versatility of mind and spirit to break cases.
Many times in your investigative career you will ask yourself, “why did he do that?” “Whatever possessed him to go that way?” “Why didn’t he do it that way?” You may never get the answer but be prepared for the most unusual as well as the most common behavior.
There are thousands of instances to support the irrational acts of human beings.
Why would two middle-aged brothers keep the mummified corpse of their mother for years in their apartment and then finally decide to get rid of her? They took her body in a shopping cart to a vacant lot where they left her. Why did they pass several vacant lots on their mission? Wouldn’t it have been easier to dispose of her at the nearest lot?
Why do killers keep their weapons only to later find them to become evidence against them?
THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A GROUNDER!
You hear the statement, “This one’s a ground ball”, and you should immediately cringe!
Every case demands a thorough investigation to insure a conviction. Do not take a case lightly or assume that it will stand on its own merit. You must see to it that the case offers an excellent package to present before a Grand Jury and at trial.
Uniformed officers arrive at a scene of a dispute in the street and observe a man rendering first aid and performing CPR on another. Witnesses tell the PO’s that the man applying CPR just stabbed the victim; this person makes a statement that he “just killed his brother”.
Apprehension is quickly effected and there are no outstanding perps.
Ground ball?
Well, if you think there is little work involved for the detectives you are very wrong.
Put the case together, collect statements from witnesses, corroborate statements. Provide the best possible case to the prosecutor for Grand Jury and trial. Be prepared for th presentation to the jury that will look to discredit your work: “You mean to tell me this person you call the killer was performing CPR on his brother when you got there?”
Detectives work to put a case together which includes corroborating statements, and discrediting alibis. When the perp provides an alibi it is your duty as the detective to either prove or disprove it!
THE ESSENTIAL PENCIL
As any detective who has ever tried to take notes at a winter crime scene realizes, an essential tool for the detective in this cold weather is THE PENCIL.
A good mechanical pencil in the pocket next to a fine writing instrument- the essential tools of the working detective!
While some try to rely on “memory”, the good detective understands the value of proper note-taking- and is prepared for the freezing weather with a good pencil!
THE FIVE FOLDERS
A piece of advise for response at a major incident scene is to have the information pertaining to the following five items readily available to the command staff in separate folders.
Video: Are there any video recordings of the incident? Where did we canvass for video, and what were the results? Are there any locations we need to go back to retrieve video from?
Statements: What statements were made by the perp? By the complainant? By any witnesses? Who received these statements, and how are they recorded?
Identification: You have a perp in handcuffs? How was he/she identified? Who has made an identification? How are we going to proceed with this suspect as a perp? Don’t forget basic identification issues- if the perp was apprehended at the scene by responding police officers, then what is the identification process that took place?
Physical Evidence: What physical evidence is being recovered? How does this evidence play into our scene? What are the identifiers of the evidence, and what are we looking to have done with this evidence? Where is it, and who is caring for it?
Time Line: Develop a time line that walks you through the incident- when was the first call received, when did officers arrive, what time was any movement from the scene made? Go back as far as necessary in your time line as is appropriate.
INTERESTING WEB SITE
Remember to bookmark this site- it is a wonderful tribute to all our brothers and sisters who have given themselves in the line of duty. It is a superbly managed site, and surely shows the respect these officers deserve.
IN MEMORIAM: PO FRANCIS HENNESSY – 70 PCT
Police Officer Francis Hennessy, a 35-year-old Brooklyn cop collapsed while responding to an unfounded report of a man with a gun died of a brain aneurysm.
Francis Hennessy, an Irish national and an NYPD cop for eight years, died at Downstate Medical Center, less than 15 hours after he was hospitalized the previous night when responding to a call of an armed man in the Flatbush section.
A spokesman for the city's medical examiner said the cause of death was a "ruptured brain aneurysm," a genetic condition in which a bulge in a vessel creates intra-cranial pressure upon bursting. Hennessy, a scooter cop assigned to the 70th Precinct, had 75 arrests in his career. He became ill after responding with two other cops to a report at of a man with a gun, collapsing after emerging from a radio patrol car. Other officers tried to save his life, performing CPR upon him and he was taken to Kings County Hospital before being transferred to Downstate.
He was initially believed to have suffered two separate heart attacks. An eight-year veteran of the force, Hennessy received three departmental commendations for excellence on duty during his career, police said. He was married with two children. He joined the police force in 1997.
“LEST WE FORGET…” THE NYPD MEMORIAL
January 10, 1987 PO Francis LaSalla, ESS1, Fire rescue
January 10, 1998 PO Edward Ahrens, 28 Pct, Shot (5/5/75) narco invest
January 10, 2006 PO Francis Hennessy, 70 Pct, brain aneurysm
January 11, 1908 Ptl Robert Fitzgerald, Bridge Pct, Drowned-Rescue
January 11, 1916 Ptl Joseph Gaffney, 26 Pct, Shot-arrest
January 11, 1929 Ptl Albert Bruden, Mcy Unit, Auto pursuit
January 11, 1941 Ptl Edward Maher, Traffic P, Shot-robbery
January 12, 1974 PO Timothy Murphy, 120 Pct, Shot-off duty incident
January 12, 1981 PO Robert Walsh, 7 Pct, Shot-off duty robbery
January 13, 1924 Ptl John Schneider, 3Div, Robbery investigation
January 13, 1950 Ptl Edward Carraher, 14 Pct, Injured on patrol
January 13, 1997 Det Kenny Fung, 72 Sqd, Heart attack during investigation
January 15, 1938 Ptl Frank Zaccor, 14 Pct, Shot-robbery in progress
January 16, 1953 Ptl Thomas Sheehan, 10 Pct, Line of duty heart attack
January 17, 1947 Ptl Harry Schriffies, McyDist, Shot-investigation
January 17, 2000 PO Benny Marciante, SITF, LOD Heart attack
January 18, 1935 Ptl James Killion, 17 Pct, Shot-robbery in progress
January 18, 1960 Sgt Edward Johnson, 5 Pct, Stabbed by EDP
January 18, 1967 Det Harold Jacob, Safe Loft & Burg Sqd, Line of duty heart attack
January 18, 1979 PO Robert Manzione, 7 Pct, Line of duty heart attack
January 21, 1932 Ptl John Walsh, 17 Div, Shot-off duty robbery
January 21, 1941 Ptl Daniel Piselli, 88 Pct, Killed-line of duty incident
January 21, 1948 Ptl William Von Weisenstein, 101 Pct, Auto accident on patrol
January 21, 1958 Det Francis O’Rourke, 32 Sqd, Line of duty heart attack
January 21, 1986 Det Anthony Venditti, OCCB, Shot-investigation
January 21, 1995 Det Alfred Boesch, Housing SNEU, Line of duty incident