Part Three: Is the FBI looking in the wrong places?

Part Three: Is the FBI looking in the wrong places?

This is a third part of this trifecta of articles: Is the FBI looking in the wrong places? In this article we will address why current programs/system fall short of our expectations, and why our CAPS system offers scientifically reliable violence prediction and thus prevention.

If you have not read my previous two LinkedIn Posts on this subject: “Is the FBI looking in the wrong places?” and “Part Two: Is the FBI looking in the wrong places?” please STOP and read these articles in sequence. Do so and this article will make a great deal more sense.  

It is my contention that all of our governmental agencies (FBI, CIA, DHS’s SPOT, DARPA, etc.) and current “Threat Assessment Programs” are wrong headed. I realize that this statement puts me at odds with some of the brightest minds of my fellow Americans. This is not hubris, but an alternative approach that I have been developing over the past 25 years and I now wish to share this alternative approach with you.

If you disagree, please of have courtesy to explain your perspective in enough detail that we can have an earnest conversation. If you agree with my perspective, please share this article, and my previous two articles, with as many colleagues, groups, etc. as you can, because, we as Americans need this perspective shared. We are losing too many good men and women overseas and at home, so please read all three articles and let me know what your thoughts are . . .

Aggressive Behavior: Probabilities versus Predictabilities

One of the key short comings, if not the main flaw in logic within the Threat Assessment industry is understanding the difference between Probabilities versus Predictabilities.

Probability is defined as, “The chance that something will happen. How likely it is that some event will occur.” Said simply in the context of our Critical Aggression Prevention System (CAPS) probability is defined as, “Within a certain group of individuals, there is a higher probability of a shooter.” However, “Probability” does not tell us who the next shooter is! This is the “flaw” with the use of Probabilities.

Where are we applying probabilities? Mental Health Assessments, Threat Assessment itself! This flaw is especially pronounced when the probable outcome is less than one percent.

Predictability is defined as consistent repetition of a state, course of action, behavior, or the like, making it possible to know in advance what to expect as described by the FBI and Secret Service as “Identifying someone on the path to violence.” We refer to this form of analysis as “identifying the sequential successive precursors to violence.” We have said in previous articles, and it must be reiterated here, there is no absolute (100%) predictability, however, there is scientifically reliable predictability, as we will soon illustrate.

Let’s Review: Probabilities

With Probabilities, we must ask ourselves, what real insight does the use of probabilities bring. Does using probabilities bring us meaningful insight and/or information? There is flaw, when we reverse the logic and consider a National sampling: these “stressors,” “marker,” etc., do not hold enough value for us so that we could seriously consider them. As an example, The Parkland Shooter, Nikolas Cruz:

  • Recently lost his mother, which was considered a stressor and thus a potential reason for his rampage shooting, taking 17 innocent lives. However, if we ask, how many students across the Nation who lost their mothers follow that experience by murdering people, the result would be less than one percent. Are we going to put all of these individuals in asylums in order to protect us from the “less than one percent?” Not likely!
  • Was expelled from school, which was considered a “stressor” that may have caused this subsequent rampage shooting; however, if we ask how many students across the Nation who were expelled from school followed that experience by murdering people, once again, the result would be less than one percent.
  • May have had a mental disorder. Certainly, his legal defense team will try to make a case for insanity, but that doesn’t change the fact that mental health “assessments” are notoriously inaccurate and therefore are not good predictors of future shooters. Seung-Hui Cho, of Virginia Tech infamy, was mental health assessed on three different occasions and on each and every occasion he was declared “not at risk of hurting himself and others” just before murdering 32 people and then taking his own life.  So, we ask ourselves, how many people across our Nation who have some form of “mental illness” have subsequently murdered others? The answer would be less than one percent. Incidentally the “Report to the President on Issues Raised by the Virginia Tech Tragedy,” June 13, 2007, states that “Most people who are violent do not have a mental illness, and most people who have mental illness are not violent.” In fact, they found that people with mental illness tended to be the victims of this behavior, not the perpetrators of it. 
  • Was mental health assessed by the Florida Department of Family and Children and he was deemed not to be at risk of hurting himself or others. Once again, mental health assessments are notoriously inaccurate, and they fall into the category of “probabilities.”

Another mental disorder example is Jared Lee Loughner, who was charged with 19 counts of murder and attempted murder (one of his victims was Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords), in a shooting spree near Tucson, Arizona, on January 8, 2011. Jared Lee Loughner clearly had a Thought Disorder and was probably Schizophrenic, one of the scariest forms of mental disorder. However, we know that only 0.002% of Schizophrenics have murdered another person. How can you get from 0.002% to “this is your next shooter?” You can’t! But let’s pretend that we could, are we going to put all individuals with Schizophrenia into asylums to protect us from the 0.002%? Not likely! This is the fundamental flaw with the use of “probabilities.”

The Solution: Using Predictabilities

According to the US Secret Service and the FBI, the only reliable means of identifying a future shooter is to “identify someone on the path to violence.” Once again, remember there is no absolute (100%) predication, but there is scientifically reliably predication and thus violence prevention.

The most thorough study ever conducted on the topic of violence in schools was a collaboration between the US Secret Service, Dept of Education and the National Institute of Justice. It was called the “Safe School Initiative Study,” October 2000, and it found that the only reliable way to identify a future shooter was to identify someone “on the path to violence.” Backing this assessment, in December of 2013, Andre Simmons, the Chief of the FBI’s Behavioral Threat Assessment Center/Behavioral Analysis Unit stated that the FBI’s ability to prevent violence is predicated on “identifying a person who is on a pathway to violence.”

Our scientifically validated and proprietary Critical Aggression Prevention System (CAPS) uses predictabilities as a way to identify someone on the path to violence. Further, CAPS uses predictability to identify someone on the path to bullying, abuse, harassment, conflict and discrimination. Finally, CAPS uses predictability to identify someone who is transitioning from “worthy of trust” to treachery. We have been building this solution over the past 25 years using, not subjective references, but scientifically reliable objective measurable observables.  

It is not enough that someone is identified at the 3rd Stage of our Meter of Emerging Aggression, the central analysis tool within CAPS. This could be seen as the use of probabilities. But further, we now see this individual transitioning from the 3rd Stage of the Meter of Emerging Aggression to the 4th Stage. We now have a trend . . . We now observe this individual transitioning to the 5th Stage of the Meter of Emerging Aggression. We now have someone “on the path to violence.” Does this mean that this person will be violent tomorrow? Of course not. But it does mean that this person is “on the path” and must be engaged and diffused, lest he or she becomes your next shooter. This puts in place an incredible influencer that too often is missing: “the sense of urgency to act.”

Creating the Sense of Urgency That Is Too Often Missing:

Realize that there were 45 calls made about Nikolas Cruz and his aggressive behavior to the Broward County School District, the Broward County Sheriff’s Office and the FBI and no one felt the sense of urgency to do enough to have prevented this tragedy. In fact, there were forces at play that deliberately undermined the sense of urgency to act.

This is why, with our Critical Aggression Prevention System (CAPS), we have taken this sense of urgency a step further by placing the additional emphasis on threat levels of Low Threat Risk, Moderate Threat Risk and High Threat Risk. As an example: A manager may identify someone exhibiting Low Threat Risk of aggressive behavior at Stage 3 on the Meter of Emerging Aggression. However, this aggressor now moves into the Moderate Threat Risk Level, Stage 4 and the manager choose not to act. These managers who choose to take no action will most certainly see themselves risking personnel safety and exposing themselves to significant professional liability should aggressive outcomes occur. It is our contention that most will take the necessary critical action needed to diffuse this person, preventing any further escalation, thereby preventing any subsequent violence.

CAPS represents evidence based Best Practices and once studied and implemented, a significant advantage by reducing bullying, abuse, harassment, conflict, discrimination and ultimately violence and thus increasing productivity and demonstrating they have done everything possible to make their facilities “as safe as possible,” this highest form of evidence-based Best Practices.  

Invitation:

If you like this article, please share it with others . . . Others in LinkedIn, LinkedIn Groups or on Facebook or other social media outlets you believe will be well served by this knowledge.

Yes, this is a validated “system” that we call the Critical Aggression Prevention System (CAPS). If you would like to learn more, we are offering a 1.5-hour webinar where we will explain how the system works, why the system works, and how it might have application for you and your business. We are conducting two live-webinars, one on June 18 and the other on June 19 at noon Eastern Time. Sign up now by going to: https://www.aggressionmanagement.com/caps-webinar-landing-page.html. The cost of this webinar is free and promises to offer a life changing paradigm for you and your business!  


Jorge Alejandro G.

Business Analyst | Podcast Host

5 年

Thank you very much Dr John D. Byrnes in Mexico for most people the prediction of violence is the ONLY option. With corrupt law enforcement and criminals hunting people like a jungle. The approach of reaction is simply a suicide. Again thank you very much

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Sylvia D.

Property Management

5 年

This is valuable information that needs to be taken seriously and applied as a requirement for all organizations. It’s becoming a trend that needs to be addressed before it further escalates to yet another unfortunate situation that could have been avoided. We need to take a stand at recognizing changes in behaviors, avoid ignoring situations that warrant proper and immediate attention, and learn how to diffuse these behaviors. I believe the key is to provide constant education about the importance of recognizing an individual that may be transitioning, seek and provide assistance to defuse, communicate and work together with proper authorities in an organization to address the incident and avoid it from ‘falling through the cracks’, many precious lives depend on it. Thank you John, I feel that your CAPS program is credible and most beneficial.

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