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SnapShot: The Fast and Furious: The Pursuit I Should Have Ended…Before the Crash

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Manage episode 519751661 series 3571180
Content provided by Aaron...DJ, Musician, Superhero. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aaron...DJ, Musician, Superhero or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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Blue lights don’t just flip on; they flip a switch in the mind. We open up about the rush, the pressure, and the quiet math behind police pursuits—where 100 miles per hour means 150 feet a second and a single call on the radio can change the outcome. I walk through a chase that still sticks with me: nighttime streets on the city’s edge, a string of units behind me, and a Jeep that wouldn’t stop. I knew the risks were stacking up—blind corners, dips, unfamiliar roads—and I still pushed forward. Then I tried a PIT I shouldn’t have, cratered the hood of our brand-new Dodge Charger, and kept going until a final move pinned the suspect in place.
That’s where the real lesson starts. Was it a pin or a ram? Did necessity justify contact, or did I cross into deadly force without grounds? Supervisors called it a ram, and a policy was born with my name on it—an uncomfortable legacy that now defines speeds, contact, and the exact line officers can’t cross. We unpack why pursuit guidelines shifted over the years: from chasing broken taillights to near-zero tolerance for risk, and back again as agencies respond to crime trends, liability, and public trust. You’ll hear how adrenaline, pride, and peer pressure can blur judgment, and how disciplined radio traffic and supervisory oversight are meant to keep everyone safe.
If you’ve ever asked why officers sometimes let a car go, or why a minor infraction ends with sirens and wreckage, this story brings clarity. We talk training, PIT standards, ethical thresholds, and the stark difference between stopping someone today and arresting them safely tomorrow. It’s not about taking the “fun” out of the job; it’s about putting life first—yours, mine, and the people who never chose to be part of the chase. If this conversation gave you a new lens on police pursuits, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find it. Your feedback shapes what we tackle next.

www.StreamlineEventsLLC.com
www.DoubleDownDuo.com
@StreamlineSEE
@DDownDuo
Youtube-Instagram-Facebook

  continue reading

Chapters

1. How Pursuit Policies Shifted (00:00:00)

2. The Ethics Of Chasing For Minor Crimes (00:01:40)

3. Pressure, Radio Chatter, And Risk (00:03:16)

4. The New Charger And A High-Speed Chase (00:04:22)

5. Lost In Neighborhoods At 70 MPH (00:06:15)

6. A Botched PIT And A Cratered Hood (00:07:41)

7. Pin Or Ram And The Turnage Rule (00:09:10)

114 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 519751661 series 3571180
Content provided by Aaron...DJ, Musician, Superhero. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aaron...DJ, Musician, Superhero or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

Blue lights don’t just flip on; they flip a switch in the mind. We open up about the rush, the pressure, and the quiet math behind police pursuits—where 100 miles per hour means 150 feet a second and a single call on the radio can change the outcome. I walk through a chase that still sticks with me: nighttime streets on the city’s edge, a string of units behind me, and a Jeep that wouldn’t stop. I knew the risks were stacking up—blind corners, dips, unfamiliar roads—and I still pushed forward. Then I tried a PIT I shouldn’t have, cratered the hood of our brand-new Dodge Charger, and kept going until a final move pinned the suspect in place.
That’s where the real lesson starts. Was it a pin or a ram? Did necessity justify contact, or did I cross into deadly force without grounds? Supervisors called it a ram, and a policy was born with my name on it—an uncomfortable legacy that now defines speeds, contact, and the exact line officers can’t cross. We unpack why pursuit guidelines shifted over the years: from chasing broken taillights to near-zero tolerance for risk, and back again as agencies respond to crime trends, liability, and public trust. You’ll hear how adrenaline, pride, and peer pressure can blur judgment, and how disciplined radio traffic and supervisory oversight are meant to keep everyone safe.
If you’ve ever asked why officers sometimes let a car go, or why a minor infraction ends with sirens and wreckage, this story brings clarity. We talk training, PIT standards, ethical thresholds, and the stark difference between stopping someone today and arresting them safely tomorrow. It’s not about taking the “fun” out of the job; it’s about putting life first—yours, mine, and the people who never chose to be part of the chase. If this conversation gave you a new lens on police pursuits, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find it. Your feedback shapes what we tackle next.

www.StreamlineEventsLLC.com
www.DoubleDownDuo.com
@StreamlineSEE
@DDownDuo
Youtube-Instagram-Facebook

  continue reading

Chapters

1. How Pursuit Policies Shifted (00:00:00)

2. The Ethics Of Chasing For Minor Crimes (00:01:40)

3. Pressure, Radio Chatter, And Risk (00:03:16)

4. The New Charger And A High-Speed Chase (00:04:22)

5. Lost In Neighborhoods At 70 MPH (00:06:15)

6. A Botched PIT And A Cratered Hood (00:07:41)

7. Pin Or Ram And The Turnage Rule (00:09:10)

114 episodes

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