NCJ Number
176734
Journal
American Journal of Criminal Justice Volume: 23 Issue: 1 Dated: Fall 1998 Pages: 83-106
Date Published
1998
Length
24 pages
Annotation
This study is based on previous research on the primary factors that influence officer decisions regarding the use of differing levels of force in police-citizen encounters.
Abstract
Using a totality-of-the-circumstance approach, primary emphasis is on explaining those factors that contribute to officers' estimation of the perceived level of threat inherent in police-citizen encounters. Officers' perceived level of threat presented by a suspect or the situational context of an encounter is important, because in 1989 the U.S. Supreme Court in the Graham v. Conner decision mandated that the appropriate amount of force that can be used depends on the following four primary factors: the threat, offense severity, actual resistance offered, and whether the suspect is trying to escape custody. These criteria were tested and placed into a predictive model along with other indicators the literature has found to correlate with situations in which police force is used most often. The findings suggest that although the threat presented to officers is important and related to the level of force that is deemed appropriate by the police profession, many additional elements must be taken into consideration when interpreting whether an officer used force correctly. 4 tables and 45 references