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Home » The Importance of Mindset in Policing: Chip Huth (Transcript)

The Importance of Mindset in Policing: Chip Huth (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Chip Huth’s talk titled “The Importance of Mindset in Policing” at TEDxTacoma conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Hello, good afternoon. My name is Chip Huth, and I’ve been a law enforcement officer for the past 24 years. And for most of that time, I have police problems, not people. As we’re all aware, law enforcement has come under deep scrutiny in the wake of recent significant events in our country. Some of these high-profile events have contributed to a lack of trust in the police on the part of many community members, and for most of my career, I’ve been part of that problem.

The Transformation Journey

But over the last several years in Kansas City, we’ve been on a journey, a journey learning to apply new ways of policing that have been transformational, particularly for me and the members of my team.

With the real urgency to find solutions to our biggest problems, I want to share how this transformation occurred for us and what it has meant in Kansas City. I’m here because I know what has happened with us can happen anywhere. When I first became a SWAT team member, our city’s Westside community was deeply burdened with high volume crime.

Many businesses had relocated, and the streets resembled open sewers. Most of the criminals blended in with groups of undocumented workers and preyed on them and other citizens who were too fearful to cooperate with the police. At one point, our SWAT team was brought in with a mandate to clean it up. We adopted a zero-tolerance policy toward crime of any kind, but the situation continued to decline.

We policed the neighborhood heavily. We wrote tickets and made arrests for any violation we observed, no matter how minor. We were fishing with a net instead of a spear, and many hardworking community members got caught up in the sweeps meant to discourage the criminals. Despite our work, the crime rate increased, and because of our work, some community members began to see us as the enemy.

I remember one critical thinking officer approaching me and asking, “Chip, you do realize what we’re doing isn’t working, right?” To which I replied, “Yes, of course, I realize it isn’t working, but we’re the police, and this is what we do.” It was my narrow-mindedness that invited community members to complain more and cooperate less. A few years later, I was promoted and had the opportunity to lead a SWAT team of my own.

A New Perspective

I brought the same mindset I had employed on the Westside with me, and it wasn’t long before that team was one of the most complained-upon units in the entire department. I was equal parts blind to the needs of the community and the potential of my team. It was in the middle of all this that we encountered the ideas of the Arbinger Institute.

Through a partnership with the Institute and our Leadership Academy, we began to ask a question. “Do we really see the people we’re policing as people?” As we started to ask ourselves this question, our team members started to consider what it might be like to be policed by us. As our collective mindset began to shift, so did our results. Let me illustrate with a few quick stories.

Our team encounters many aggressive dogs during search warrant service operations. Aggressive dogs pose obvious dangers to the team, and the primary way for the team to address them was to shoot them. This made the owners of the animals predictably angry and sad.

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Relating to the dog owners, one squad member asked this question of our team. He said, “What if we could serve a warrant on your house without shooting your dog, would you want us to?” Well, many of the team members are pet owners, so you can imagine what the answer was. This one question led us to embed a dog expert with our team to learn our jobs and to teach us about dog behavior. We also implemented additional technology to capture and restrain aggressive animals.

This initiative to date has resulted in an 80% reduction in dogs being shot on search warrant executions in Kansas City, Missouri. Our team utilizes patrol wagons to escort suspects to jail. These wagons are essentially vans that have been converted to haul prisoners. A couple of officers were operating these wagons, noticed that people were complaining about the excessive heat in the summer months.

As a result, they were often angry and unruly, and when they got to jail, they caused disturbances with the detention people. The wagon drivers listened to the complaints of these folks, and they actually did an investigation themselves. They took it upon themselves to look into this. They discovered the cabins of the patrol wagons could heat up to dangerous levels on some days, but because of the modifications made to the vehicle, cool air could not be effectively pumped into the prisoner compartment.

These officers went to the local hardware store and purchased PVC pipe and duct tape with money out of their own wallets. They used the duct tape to attach one end of the PVC pipe to the air conditioner vents in the driver’s compartment, ran the other end of the pipe through the metal mesh into the back of the prisoner’s compartment. This made it possible to push cool air into the back of the wagon, providing relief from the heat to the suspects as they were being transported to the detention facility.

As we started to see people we were policing more and more as people who mattered the way we mattered, it began to affect what we did as we responded to unique situations in ways we could not have conceived of when we were operating from an N-word mindset.

Stories of Change

One summer day our team chased a violent fugitive into an apartment complex. The man hid in the ceiling of one of the apartments, requiring us to evacuate the entire building.