NaBITA States Vigilance can Empower Prevention of Shootings
BERWYN, Pa., June 14, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- As we learn the details of the Orlando Pulse shooting, there is a very real temptation to see the attacker as a monster, to shake our heads and lament that there is no way to predict or prevent these kinds of horrific events. However, monsters do not carry out these massacres. People do. And these shootings can be prevented, whether terroristic or driven by other motives, through early identification and intervention prior to the escalation toward the shooters' moment of deadly commitment.
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There is a consensus in the threat and violence risk assessment community that it is difficult, if not impossible, to predict this kind of violence. There are just too many variables and risk factors to accurately say if a person is likely to move forward with an attack. So if we cannot predict mass shootings, where does this leave us? Family and friends of the shooter may take to the airwaves to claim that they never saw this coming, or had no clue that he was capable of such violence, but maybe they just didn't know what to look for, or didn't understand the meaning of the signs that violence was impending.
If we can understand the risk factors for those who plan rampage violence, we can reduce the current epidemic of workplace massacres, school shootings, and terroristic attacks. Every attack starts with a common, central risk factor: a hardened and inflexible ideology. This could be anti-American values, religious-fueled hatred, the belief that an individual or group of people are deserving of vengeance, rejection by a romantic obsession, etc. The list is extensive.
In this case, it appears to be rage about sexual orientation. The signal is the intractable view and an unwillingness to find a common or middle ground. You might also find that such an individual objectifies and depersonalizes those who are at odds with his or her perspective. People with differences in opinions are viewed as the enemy, without humanity or the right to disagree. We see this as part of the pathway to violence at Orlando Pulse, just as we saw this in the San Bernardino attack.
Former FBI profiler Dr. Mary Ellen O'Toole refers to the escalation of this hardened perspective as "injustice collecting." The individual holds a deep grudge or resentment toward another individual, group, or society based on his belief that he is owed certain action by the target. The common thread is an inflexible belief and a perseveration on the perceived injustices the attacker has suffered.
At NaBITA, the National Behavioral Intervention Team Association (www.nabita.org), colleges, schools, and workplaces are taught to attend to several dozen risk factors in an effort to prepare them to intervene early with at-risk students, staff, or faculty members who may be on the pathway to violence. The goal is to help them identify those who have a narrowed fixation or focus on an individual, group, or community as a receptacle for their anger, frustration, and rage.
What can prevent tragic attacks is a well-trained, well-informed public. The Orlando Pulse shooter, like almost all others, likely left clues on his pathway to violence. This is called leakage. It is crucial in today's society that people are trained on how to identify early risk factors for rampage and predatory violence, and on how to report information to be reviewed and acted upon by Behavioral Intervention Teams (BITs) and law enforcement. For more information, visit www.nabita.org.
Read NaBITA's full response.
Contact:
Michelle Issadore
610-993-0229
SOURCE National Behavioral Intervention Team Association
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