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Calibre Press Instructor: Chief Scott Hughes - YouTube
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Calibre Press is a company based in Illinois that conducts training for law enforcement officers in the United States.

The company is owned by Jim Glennon, a former police lieutenant in the Chicago suburb of Lombard, Illinois. Glennon purchased Calibre Press in 2012.

The company offers training seminars for police, and in 2016 was reported to offer 190 classes per year (an increase from 35 classes a year in 2012); among these are Emotional Survival for Female Enforcers, Constitutional Use of Force, Read-Recognize-Respond (deescalation), Balancing Our Biases (implicit bias), and many more. Calibre Press instructors (twelve in all, including Glennon) make presentations to more than 20,000 officers a year.

Calibre Press publishes books for public safety, including Arresting Communications and Street Survival. It recently distributed In Context by Nick Selby, Ben Singleton, and Ed Flosi. Glennon intends to grow the books publishing aspect of the business. CalibrePress.com publishes weekly piece on such topics as mindfulness for first responders, leadership, and deescalation and distributes then via a weekly newsletter. The email newsletter, called the Newsline, began in 1996 and now reaches approximately 130,000 police officers nationally.

Under Glennon's ownership, Calibre Press has worked with dozens of journalists, including National Public Radio, Minnesota Public Radio, Vice, Bloomberg, The New York Times, and dozens of local affiliates in an effort to increase public awareness.[1] Although criticised for 'warrior' training, Glennon points out that none of the critics has actually attended the training. The exception to this is Bloomberg BusinessWeek, which reported that "Like many companies in the business, Calibre promotes a 'warrior' mentality for police, likening cops to soldiers and focusing on conflict, vigilance, and martial skills." Glennon disputes this characterization. St. Paul police Commander Ed Lemmon told journalist Robert Sanchez about Calibre Press: "The idea is the deeper your understanding about what's happening, the more you're able to deal with it because you'll recognize what it is."[2] Sue Rahr, Executive Director of the Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission and the most prominent police critic of warrior policing,[3] has said that Calibre Press training isn't 'warrior' training.[4]

The content of the "Bulletproof Warrior" seminar and associated booklet in particular has been criticized by the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) for portraying the world as being a "constant and increased threat to officers" and for emphasizing that "officers are allowed to -- and need to -- use more force than they may believe, and to use it pre-emptively." Chuck Wexler, who issued the statement, has never attended the training. In fact, Calibre Press conducted its Constitutional Use of Force training in Salt Lake City on April 10, 2016. That city has since been celebrated by police critics as a model of deescalation strategy.


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References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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