" 415 FAMILY DISTURBANCE " 1970s POLICE & LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER DOMESTIC VIOLENCE TRAINING XD75704

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PeriscopeFilm

PeriscopeFilm

11 ай бұрын

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This law enforcement educational film is part of a series produced by David Lee and James Economides under the Attorney General’s Office for the State of California in conjunction with grants from “California Council on Criminal Justice” and the “Law Enforcement Assistance Administration,” United States Department of Justice. It is narrated by Evelle J. Younger, directed by Richard Bansbach and Eric E. Younger as executive producer. Released in 1970s, it is meant to show the changes in the approach of the Oakland, California police department in dealing with police code 415 "family disturbance" as an attempt to bring the police and the citizen closer.
Abstract (0:12). A man reading the newspaper and watching the tv as the woman walks in (1:13). The couple have a heated argument (1:18). As the man attempts to attack the woman, she holds a vase (1:29). The man slaps the woman across the face (1:33) as they are being heard outside the house (1:36). The officer talking about a case to while driving (1:47). “Legal Information for Law Enforcement” (2:29). “415 Family Disturbance One Department’s Approach” (2:239). Police officers arriving at a house (2:50). The man from the earlier scene is pulling the woman’s hair in the living room as the door knocks (3:05). Police officers questioning the man about the situation and the woman cries for help running to the door (3:42). The two police officers push the man inside as they barge in the house because the man tries to aggressively close the door (4:00). Woman sitting on the chair and telling the story of her fight with her husband (4:08). The police officers leave the house as the woman did not want to make a citizen’s arrest (4:55). The officers walk back to their car and report the case as “resolved” to the headquarter (5:13). They continue observing the house as the patrolman takes notes of his observations (5:54). “See the City Attorney in the morning” (7:06). “It’s a civil matter. See your lawyer” (7:09). Both officers run towards the house startled by the sound of a gunfire (7:11). They find the woman with a gun in her hand, and they handcuff her (7:23). View of Oakland city California (8:09). Oakland Police Administration Building (8:16). Office of Chief of Police (8:19). Three men in a meeting about the case (8:21). Chief of Police C R Gain (8:41). “To reduce the violence and conflict between the police officer and the citizen” (9:27). Two policemen getting out of a car and questioning a woman in Santa Rita St (9:40). A man speaking to the cops from the balcony of the house (11:06). Both police officers and the woman walk into the house (12:58). “Downplayed authority” (13:04). Police officers talking to the man and trying to solve the issue (13:07). Police officers in a locker room and talking about their 415 Family Disturbance cases (13:50). Recording starts and two police officers are sitting in the living room and talking to another woman (15:55). One of the officers writes the address of Alameda County Health Department and hands it over to the woman (15:55). A man barges in as he is assaulting a young boy (17:10) and the officers try to stop him (17:19). The officers try to talk to the man (17:25) before he aggressively refuses (18:40). The man attacks his wife with his belt and the officers stop him (19:58). The officers arrest the man for assault (20:17). Uniformed officers discussing the recording in the locker room (21:14). Chief of Police, Charles R Gain speaking from his office desk (21:23). Scenes from the spots of the patrolmen around the city (21:44). Three people standing next to a police car on the street (4:51). Two police officers in a “1325” police car heading to another 415F case (25:13). List of the officers from Oakland Police Department (25:55). List of role players (26:05). The script is written by David Lee and the script consultants are Marc Turchin and James Economides (26:23). List of collaborators (26:28). Role players provided by Edward O “Pete” Lee Education/Research, Inc (26:35).
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This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com

Пікірлер: 57
@jeremyjackson8196
@jeremyjackson8196 10 ай бұрын
Policing has come a long ways. Today, Mr. Patterson would've had the entire SWAT Team at his door.
@fozziebear26
@fozziebear26 10 ай бұрын
No seatbelts....wear your helmet instead 😂
@calbob750
@calbob750 10 ай бұрын
For the police domestic violence is one of the more dangerous calls. The fighters often turn their violence to the responding officer.
@jeffkaczmarek3577
@jeffkaczmarek3577 10 ай бұрын
Putting on a cop costume doesn't even make the list of the top 20 most dangerous jobs in America. Pizza delivery drivers put their lives on the line far more than the leeches of LE do and they can't just retire after 20 years and suckle at the teats of the taxpayers for the rest of their lives like those socialist swine.
@johncashwell1024
@johncashwell1024 10 ай бұрын
No "suspect" here... No militarized police. These are "citizens" and the calls that police reapond to are "service" calls. Back in the early 90s, when I went through Basic Law Enforcement Training, these videos from the 70s and 80s were used in our training. Emphasis was placed on assising citizens.
@Sheepdog1314
@Sheepdog1314 10 ай бұрын
not all departments are militant. Mine isn't. And I'm not a jackboot.
@thomasgoodwin2648
@thomasgoodwin2648 10 ай бұрын
Speaking as a (somewhat) informed citizen, I appreciate that not all cops are flatfeet. For many of us though that have had to live under the gun of militant police (LA in the Gates era) we view any demands of respect with deep skepticism. (Yes I have seen Jackbooted riot squads marching in lock step down my street, pushing out legally gathered crowds. The only thing missing was the goosestep.) Respect is earned. When it is demanded at gunpoint it usually has the opposite effect. In the so called 'drug war' many innocents have been swept up by corrupt departments cheating the systems to make arrests and score promotional brownie points (as well as seizures that amount to legalized robbery to fill dept and civic coffers). Even those of us that were truly 'guilty' (smoking a joint, pop a few pills, whatev's) understood that we were 'the enemy'. I've had a couple not so nice experiences from that end of it. Those perceptions are going to be very difficult to reverse. The only 'wars' I would personally choose at this point would be cockroaches and bedbugs. I have zero desire to be anyone else's enemy. I also know that any interactions I have in future with police will be tempered by my past experiences. Sadly this means that any officer I encounter is going to have to earn my trust and respect, rather than have it given. I'll also tell you who I do still have that kind of auto-respect for... firefighters. Again I say I get that not all cops are bad. In fact the majority probably do actually believe and practice as they preach, but when your own home begins to feel a bit like a gulag, the equation changes quickly, and it's going to be a long time before it swings back the other way. I wish you luck in your quest to reclaim the respect you are likely due, but lost by your colleagues that see themselves as an occupying army or are just plain corrupt.
@briansmith2125
@briansmith2125 10 ай бұрын
@@Sheepdog1314 RIIGGGHHHHTTTTT.......
@dariowiter3078
@dariowiter3078 5 ай бұрын
​@@thomasgoodwin2648 In other words, you're a libtard for calling the police "militarized," am I right, you idiot??? 😡😡😡😡😡
@Just1American1966
@Just1American1966 2 ай бұрын
I was one of those who actually enjoyed the "social" side of police work more, pretty much a "community police officer" before that had become something so rare it it had to be introduced again. Even today, long after leaving the job, I get taken for a cop by my appearance, but get told it's surprising I did it because I'm "too nice."
@julybliss4440
@julybliss4440 10 ай бұрын
I would love to be a fly on the wall hearing the commentary from todays police classes about old training.
@theozank853
@theozank853 10 ай бұрын
How times have changed. Both parties are not interviewed in the same presence. At least one party goes to Jail. A mandatory protection order is in place. Even if the reporting party tries to recant their story it is still investigated. Victims back then had little to no protection against reprisals from their attacker. It pretty much stayed this way in to the 1990's.
@RatzoMcFatso
@RatzoMcFatso 10 ай бұрын
Who else noticed that it was Star Trek on the TV @ 3:12?
@user-wi9hv2pb2q
@user-wi9hv2pb2q 10 ай бұрын
I respect how these training films show real world scenarios and conversations.
@thomasgoodwin2648
@thomasgoodwin2648 10 ай бұрын
Always the casting choice, Real people that can't act, or actors that can't be real people. Often we get the worst of both.
@PaulBlacksmith-xr4sy
@PaulBlacksmith-xr4sy 10 ай бұрын
What a big beautiful Chrysler Squad car that white sedan is! I believe it's a Plymouth Fury or a Dodge Polara. Spectacular squad cars in the early to mid 70s!
@ThaddeusJameson
@ThaddeusJameson 13 күн бұрын
1971 polara dodge !
@ThaddeusJameson
@ThaddeusJameson 13 күн бұрын
The almighty c platform !
@hhairball9
@hhairball9 10 ай бұрын
I remember when my stepmother's first husband would bust her teeth, blacken her eyes, break a finger, and the cops would just look at her and say, "Ma'am, do you want to press charges?" She knew that he would hurt her worse when he got out, so she said no. Then, another time, he came at her with a hammer and she grabbed a knife from the dish rack. She killed him and did some years for murder. Get that.
@ribahrabah9894
@ribahrabah9894 10 ай бұрын
F.
@EYE_GOTCHA
@EYE_GOTCHA 10 ай бұрын
She shouldn’t have served time if she was defending herself from possibly being killed. 😮
@m.woodsrobinson9244
@m.woodsrobinson9244 10 ай бұрын
Richard "Porkchop" Sanders as Mr. Davis!
@americanmilitiaman88
@americanmilitiaman88 10 ай бұрын
Back when it was socially acceptable for a man to backhand his wife because dinner wasn't ready in time.
@mikecrawford5331
@mikecrawford5331 10 ай бұрын
I remember in the 70s people smoked in the grocery store while shopping with cigarettes butts all over the floor, People hit their kids in public, It was acceptable to slap the waitress on the but. People under 50 would be shocked if they could see that time period
@hanginlaundry360
@hanginlaundry360 10 ай бұрын
My parents/grandparents would have found that unacceptable. Grandparents born on the 1800s. My grandfathers were both kindhearted gentlemen.
@JakobHill
@JakobHill 10 ай бұрын
​@@mikecrawford5331and yet apparently young people don't have respect...
@mikecrawford5331
@mikecrawford5331 10 ай бұрын
Jakob I think every generation says that about the next generation
@user-wi9hv2pb2q
@user-wi9hv2pb2q 10 ай бұрын
Completely unacceptable. It happened, it Still happens, but it was Never acceptable in my family. One great grandfather used to get drunk and the whole family would hide outside, even in winter, but it wasn't Accepted.
@evilasseastside5624
@evilasseastside5624 10 ай бұрын
14:57 God damn that shit HIT. Every officer in uniform needs to hear this brother talk TRUTH. that's honorable.
@julybliss4440
@julybliss4440 10 ай бұрын
Just what I was thinking. There whole conversation was good but that fellow taking about other officer lumping them together and thinking his uniform made him big.
@Mark.R_
@Mark.R_ 10 ай бұрын
Mr Spock on the TV. A Star Trek and CHIPS cross over.
@JackF99
@JackF99 10 ай бұрын
I guess this was Oakland back when the violence was mostly indoors.
@SB-hy9iq
@SB-hy9iq 10 ай бұрын
Why is that dude using an emory board on his nails in the locker room 😂
@jercasgav
@jercasgav 10 ай бұрын
Sargent Smith was always very...well...metro...😆
@Just1American1966
@Just1American1966 2 ай бұрын
...back when wives were still considered more "property" than people. If a man had threatened a neighbor at gunpoint, he would have been arrested for a felony charge of aggravated assault. Spouse or not, when someone threatens to shoot another, firm intervention is necessary at at least some level.
@hbailey1180
@hbailey1180 10 ай бұрын
MR PATTERSON WOULD BE IN PRISON UNDER THE 3 STRIKE LAW!
@fylarcrockley1107
@fylarcrockley1107 10 ай бұрын
shades of The Stranger (1965)
@Sheepdog1314
@Sheepdog1314 10 ай бұрын
people are much more violent nowadays. Ask me how I know.
@painful-Jay
@painful-Jay 10 ай бұрын
2:08 why’s he wearing a helmet in a car?
@Monster11B
@Monster11B 10 ай бұрын
It was a common California police practice. Seat belts weren't in use most of the time, and there were a rise in protests during the 60s and 70s. So, for crashes during emergency driving and having to be ready to respond to protests, helmets were required for some departments.
@TheMonkeyNeuron
@TheMonkeyNeuron 10 ай бұрын
Apparently, California hasn’t learned after 50 years of the wrong approach. Pretty hubristic making this bizarre film and putting themselves up as examples of the way things should be handled, given the current state of affairs in Oakland.
@fylarcrockley1107
@fylarcrockley1107 10 ай бұрын
Do they really need the helmets that much
@hunterleach5710
@hunterleach5710 10 ай бұрын
Here's what I think as a fourteen-year-old , like all things in the 70s , there were less people back then meaning that there are less corrupt cops and like everything else it was so much nicer back then
@michaelkline884
@michaelkline884 10 ай бұрын
Well Hunter I graduated in 1973 and most people tried to be nice although the IV drug problem was terrible and the Vietnam was was going strong It my opinion that heavy duty guns and automatic weapons weren’t something that regular citizens flashed around I think Oh and I went to a small Catholic high school Out of the 40 girls that graduated in my year 3 had gotten pregnant and had to drop out! 😉
@bobdebuilda3877
@bobdebuilda3877 10 ай бұрын
At 19:00 is that george carlins voice?? What the heck
@publicmail2
@publicmail2 10 ай бұрын
New Nabisco Tits
@hanginlaundry360
@hanginlaundry360 10 ай бұрын
NOPE!
@shaggydogg630
@shaggydogg630 10 ай бұрын
Send Reed and Malloy out .. One Adam Twelve. One Adam Twelve. Family disturbance
@billyclopton2656
@billyclopton2656 8 ай бұрын
If she hadn't been nagging at him, she wouldn't have gotten the hell knocked outta her!!
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