18th MP Brigade Soldiers increase professional law enforcement capabilities

By Capt. Amanda Kehrrington, 18th Military Police Brigade Public AffairsSeptember 5, 2012

18th MP Brigade Soldiers increase professional law enforcement capabilities
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Staff Sgt. Jason Taggart, 615th Military Police Company, 709th MP Battalion, 18th MP Brigade, enters a room with a suspected active shooter inside and fires on the active shooter during a scenario in an active shooter threat instructor training cours... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
18th MP Brigade Soldiers increase professional law enforcement capabilities
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Sgt. Haywood Manciel (left), 511th Military Police Company, 95th MP Battalion, 18th MP Brigade and Staff Sgt. Michael Blank (right), 92nd MP Co., 95th MP Bn., 18th MP Bde., react to an active shooter scenario during an active shooter threat instructo... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

GRAFENWOEHR, Germany (Aug. 30, 2012) -- April 20, 1999, The Columbine High School massacre occurred; April 16, 2007, the Virginia Tech massacre took place; Nov. 5, 2009, Nidal Malik Hasan allegedly killed 13 people in the worst shooting to ever take place on an American Military Base; and July 20, 2012, James Holmes allegedly opened fire on a sold- out screening of a Batman movie.

"For the last 15 years from Columbine to present day, police response to active shooter is at an all time high," said Sgt. Adam Kirschner, 709th Military Police Battalion law and order non commissioned officer in charge.

Four instructors from the Department of Homeland Security Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Glynco, Ga., taught an active shooter threat instructor training course Aug. 20-24 graduating 30 18th MP Brigade Soldiers.

According to the Department of Homeland Security, the course takes active- shooter- threat- tactics training to the next level by emphasizing leadership; teach backs, and adult learning as well as the traditional technical skills needed by field training officers and special agents.

"Planning a mobile training team to come from Homeland Security to Germany is something we don't often get, this is a once in a multiyear event and the opportunity to have them here as such an accredited and recognized organization is phenomenal," said Kirschner.

Professional law enforcement is the number one line of effort for MP Soldiers. This course started Soldiers with the fundamentals, principals and methodology and progressed into more dynamic realistic scenarios.

"This training is extremely important, unfortunately it's a skill you will never need until the time arises," said Staff Sgt. Donald Johnson, 529th MP Company squad leader, 95th MP Bn, 18th MP Bde. "It's a perishable skill. It conflicts with our tactical training, so it's hard for soldiers to get out of the tactical mindset and get back into the law enforcement mindset, because things are so different. But it is very vital, because at a moment's notice we could be called and we need to be ready."

This type of training is required for military police as law enforcement professionals and must be trained as a first responder in any emergency situation. Traditionally, law enforcement would wait for SWAT or other assistance before moving inside. Since Columbine, traditional response is no longer taught.

"The sooner law enforcement officers can get in there the more lives we save," said Thomas Crabill, senior instructor for Active Shooter Threat Instructor Training Program, Federal Law Enforcement Training Center. "In nontraditional response the first responders have to move in, we teach them to move in there by themselves as quickly as possible to at least pin down the shooter and get them in an environment where they can't kill innocent civilians."

This training course not only teaches the soldiers to be operators in response to an active shooter but certifies them to be accredited instructors; to go back to their home stations and teach the active shooter threat response training to their subordinates down to the lowest level.

"I hope they take away the ability to not only perform the response tactics they learn but also to relay them to their soldiers and actually teach this to their soldiers in order to improve our security posture," said Kirschner.

"There are some steps we are taking to professionalize law enforcement here in Germany and across the 18th MP Brigade," said Kirschner. "We are taking many steps to professionalize it and by bringing in accredited programs and making certified instructors in all different levels of force, response and tactics, that is going to make our program that much better."

Related Links:

U.S. Army Europe

21st Theater Sustainment Command