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49 J. Urb. L. 565 (1971-1972)
Deadly Weapons in the Hands of Police Officers, on Duty and off Duty

handle is hein.journals/udetmr49 and id is 577 raw text is: Deadly Weapons In The Hands Of Police
Officers, On Duty And Off Duty
JAY GERALD SAFER*
This memorandum, prepared at the request of the American Civil
Liberties Union as an aid to its study of police practices in relation to
the community at large, examines two main questions. First, in what
circumstances may police officers properly resort to the use of deadly
force in the performance of their duties? Second, should police officers
not on active duty be forbidden to bear deadly weapons?
CONCLUSIONS
1. Statutes should restrict police use of deadly force to situations
in which a peace officer reasonably believes it to be necessary (i) as a
defensive measure or (ii) as a means of either effecting an arrest or
forestalling an escape when speedy police action is needed to safeguard
others against serious physical injury or death at the hands of the es-
caper.
2. Forbidding off-duty policemen to bear weapons is not feasible
in light of current social circumstances. Lessening the danger of purpose-
ful or negligent misuse of firearms (the policeman's chief weapon) must
be sought by encouraging vigilant personnel practices and professional-
ized directives, rather than by probably finsuccessful advocacy of total
disarmament.
STATEMENT OF REASONS
1. Use of Deadly Force by Police
Use of deadly force-in modern times involving the discharge of
firearms in most instances-is no novelty in police administration. Of
course policemen have no license to kill or wound. They are subject to
the usual constraints of criminal law or tort liability when they act
beyond the scope of their duties, whether or not they be at the time of
their actions in uniform or in purported discharge of official functions.'
In past generations, however, the Common Law of England, which in
this respect was absorbed in America, tolerated police officers' resort to
deadly force when attempting to apprehend a suspected felon, though
* B.A. Vanderbilt University, 1968; J.D. Columbia University, 1971.
1. Rummel, The Right of Law Enforcement Officers to Use Deadly Force to Effect an
Arrest, 14 N.Y. LAW FORUM 749, 754 (1968).

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