Current through September 9, 2024
(a)
Initiation of Pursuit.
(1) The decision to initiate a pursuit shall
be based on the pursuing police officer's conclusion that the immediate danger
to the police officer and the public created by the pursuit is less than the
immediate or potential danger to the public should the occupants of such
vehicle remain at large.
(2) In
deciding whether to initiate a pursuit, the police officer shall take the
following factors into consideration:
(A)
Road, weather and environmental conditions;
(B) Population density and vehicular and
pedestrian traffic;
(C) Whether the
identity of the occupants is known and immediate apprehension is not necessary
to protect the public or police officers and apprehension at a later time is
feasible;
(D) The relative
performance capabilities of the pursuit vehicle and the vehicle being
pursued;
(E) The seriousness of the
offense; and
(F) The presence of
other persons in the police vehicle.
(b)
Pursuit Operations.
(1) All authorized emergency vehicle
operations shall be conducted in strict conformity with Sections
14-283a-1 to
14-283a-4, inclusive, of the Regulations of Connecticut State Agencies, and
section
14-283a
of the Connecticut General Statutes.
(2) Upon engaging in or entering into a
pursuit, the pursuing vehicle shall activate appropriate warning equipment. An
audible warning device shall be used during all such pursuits.
(3) Upon engaging in a pursuit, the police
officer shall immediately notify communications of the location, direction and
speed of the pursuit, the description of the pursued vehicle and the initial
purpose of the stop. The police officers shall keep communications updated on
the pursuit. Communications personnel shall immediately notify any available
supervisor of the agency or agencies involved in such pursuit, clear the radio
channel of non-emergency traffic, and relay necessary information to other
police officers of the involved police agency or agencies, and adjacent police
agencies in whose direction the pursuit is proceeding.
(4) When engaged in a pursuit, police
officers shall drive with due regard for the safety of persons and
property.
(5) Unless circumstances
dictate otherwise, a pursuit shall consist of no more than three police
vehicles, one of which shall be designated as the primary unit. No other
personnel shall join the pursuit unless instructed to participate by a
supervisor.
(6) The primary unit
involved in the pursuit shall become secondary when the fleeing vehicle comes
under police air surveillance or when another unit has been assigned primary
responsibility.
(c)
Supervisory Responsibilities.
(1)
When made aware of a pursuit, the appropriate supervisor shall evaluate the
situation and conditions that caused the pursuit to be initiated, the need to
continue the pursuit, and shall monitor incoming information, coordinate and
direct activities as needed to ensure that proper procedures are used. Such
supervisor shall also have the authority to terminate the pursuit. When the
agency supervisor communicates a termination directive, all agency vehicles
shall disengage warning devices and cease the pursuit.
(2) Where possible, a supervisory police
officer shall respond to the location where a vehicle has been stopped
following a pursuit.
(d)
Pursuit Tactics.
(1) Police
officers not engaged in the pursuit as the primary or secondary unit shall not
normally follow the pursuit on parallel streets unless authorized by a
supervisor or when it is possible to conduct such an operation without
unreasonable hazard to other vehicular or pedestrian traffic.
(2) When feasible, available patrol units
having the most prominent markings and emergency lights shall be used to
pursue, particularly as the primary unit. When a pursuit is initiated by other
than a marked patrol unit, such unit shall become the secondary unit when a
marked unit becomes available as the primary unit, and such unit shall
disengage from the pursuit when another marked unit becomes available as the
secondary unit.
(3) Motorcycles may
be used for a pursuit in exigent circumstances including, but not limited to,
situations where a felony has been committed, deadly force has been used by a
vehicle occupant, or the pursuit is necessary to preserve a life, provided that
weather and related conditions allow such pursuit to continue. Motorcycles
shall disengage from the pursuit when support from marked patrol units becomes
available.
(4) All intervention
techniques short of deadly force shall be used when it is possible to do so in
safety and when the police officers utilizing them have received appropriate
training in their use. Such techniques shall include, but not be limited to,
boxing in the vehicle or using controlled termination devices.
(5) Firearms shall not be discharged from
pursuit vehicles while such vehicles are in motion, except to the extent
necessary to protect a police officer or innocent person from the imminent use
of deadly physical force. Roadblocks are prohibited unless specifically
authorized by the supervisor in charge after consideration of the necessity of
applying deadly physical force to end the pursuit.
(6) Once the pursued vehicle is stopped,
police officers shall utilize appropriate police officer safety tactics and
shall be aware of the necessity to utilize only the force the police officer
reasonably believes to be necessary to take occupants into custody.
(e) Termination of the Pursuit.
(1) The police officer serving as the primary
unit engaged in the pursuit shall continually re-evaluate and assess the
pursuit situation, including all of the initiating factors, and terminate the
pursuit whenever he or she reasonably believes that the risks associated with
continued pursuit are greater than the public safety benefit of making an
immediate apprehension.
(2) The
pursuit may be terminated by the primary unit at any time.
(3) A supervisor may order the termination of
a pursuit at any time and shall order the termination of a pursuit when the
potential danger to the public outweighs the need for immediate apprehension.
Such decision shall be based on information known to the supervisor at the time
of the pursuit.
(4) A pursuit may
be terminated if the identity of the occupants has been determined, immediate
apprehension is not necessary to protect the public or police officers, and
apprehension at a later time is feasible.
(5) A pursuit may be terminated when the
police officers are prevented from communicating with their supervisors,
communications or other police officers.
(f)
Inter-jurisdictional
Pursuits.
(1) The primary unit shall
notify communications when it is likely that a pursuit will continue into a
neighboring police agency's area of law enforcement responsibility or cross the
state line. Municipal police agencies and the State Police shall notify each
other whenever entering the other's area of law enforcement
responsibility.
(2) A pursuit into
a bordering state shall comply with the laws of both states and any applicable
inter-agency agreements.
(3) In all
cases where a pursuit enters an area of law enforcement responsibility of a
police agency other than that of the initiating police agency, the police
agency in pursuit shall be responsible for immediately notifying the police
agency responsible for such area. The desk officer or duty supervisor for the
police agency responsible for such area shall determine if assistance is
necessary and police officers from police agencies other than the initiating
agency shall not join the outside pursuit unless:
(A) Directed by such duty supervisor or desk
officer; or
(B) The involved
pursuit unit is unable to request assistance; or
(C) The situation demands immediate
assistance.
The supervisors of the respective police agencies involved in
the pursuit shall communicate with each other to determine the respective
responsibilities of each police agency and to determine which police agency
will assume primary operational control of the pursuit. The supervisors shall
also communicate with each other regarding any external conditions pertinent to
the continued conduct of the pursuit. Communications between police agencies
shall be controlled by inter-agency police radio systems, if they exist, or by
telephone, if they do not.
(4) In all cases where the pursuit enters a
municipality without a regularly organized police department, notification
shall be made to the State Police troop responsible for that area. Such troop
shall maintain radio communications with all local police officers serving in
any such municipality.
(g)
After-pursuit Reporting.
(1) Whenever a police officer engages in a
pursuit, the police officer shall file a written report on the appropriate form
required by his or her agency describing the circumstances. This report shall
be reviewed by the appropriate supervisor or supervisors to determine if policy
has been complied with and to detect and correct any training
deficiencies.
(2) Each police
agency shall periodically analyze its police pursuit activity and identify any
additions, deletions or modifications warranted in agency pursuit
procedures.
(h)
Training.
Police officers who drive police vehicles shall be given
initial and periodic update training in the agency's pursuit policy and in safe
driving tactics. The provisions of Sections
14-283a-1 to
14-283a-4, inclusive, of the Regulations of Connecticut State Agencies shall be
a part of the curriculum for all police basic recruit-training and
re-certification programs in Connecticut.