Well said Dave. I don't think many of these police officers really have ever undergone much for tactical training nor have they ever been in an actual engagement. They don't get to show their force much and they jump at the opportunity.
Something tells me the calm, cool, and collected attitude you have takes some experience to obtain. I'm willing to bet the first time someone starts taking fire is much different then the 10th time.\
Part of this is, I think, the unknown factor. I've done hundreds (maybe over a thousand) felony stops in my career, I've been in riots, been shot at numerous times, been stabbed, and worked 17 years is very high volume, very violent cities.
If I'm doing a felony stop on a car (or a surround on a house, or whatever), I know exactly how many cars and officers I need, exactly where they need to be, and know exactly how I'm going to do it.
But now you tell cops they're going to do a felony stop on a plane? Something they've never trained for, never done, and are going to have to make up tactics as they go. When cops are are confronted with a situation they have never dealt with or trained for, the reaction is to bring more than you think you need and to be extra careful because you don't know where your vulnerabilities are. You can always release them after things are stable.
Once we had to do a felony stop on a motorhome, we had probably double the number of officers we would normally have, because we weren't sure how we were going to do it (all the windows, room for people to run around inside with weapons, etc). It turns out we didn't need them, but the default reaction in an unusual situation is to bulk up until you know what is what.
Lastly, photos show they took the Kings out, cuffed them while standing, and put them in cars. Cuffs and in cars is standard procedure. You take one out at a time and secure them one at a time, so the situation remains controlled.
They didn't prone them out on the ground like you normally would do with a stolen vehicle, or anything else. They did what I have done when you start a felony stop and the person who gets out makes you start reconsidering if this is a legit steal. Dial back, but run it by the numbers until everyone's secure, the vehicle is cleared to make sure there's no one hiding in the vehicle with a weapon, and then start figuring out what you actually have.
Control of the scene and the operation is in everyone's best interest. Uncontrolled scenes lead to conflict and confusion. Varying from the trained and practiced way of doing things creates confusion. Confusion leads to bad outcomes. Keep things calm, controlled, and get the scene stable and secure as rapidly as possible keeps things as safe as possible for everyone involved.
One thing, according to the FBI study of cops killed in the line of duty, "The most salient behavioral descriptors characterizing these officers appeared to be their
good-natured demeanor and conservative use of physical force, as compared to other law enforcement officers in similar situations.
They were also perceived as being well-liked by the community and the department, friendly to everyone, "laid back," and "easy going."
Further: "Officers' improper approaches and
lack of control of both situations and individuals were found to be likely contributors to the killings."
Cops find themselves in a no win situation, where the very traits that people want in cops (and that most cops would like to exhibit) are the same traits that make them more likely to end up dead.
And remember there's lots of dead cops from people who didn't "look" like criminals. For more information, google my friends Detectives Randy Bell and Ricky Childers (Tampa PD), and FL Trooper Jim Crooks, all killed by a guy that seemed to be grieving father.
http://www.wtsp.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=135125