Phoenix police chases reduced sharply with new pursuit policy
Still, Phoenix police say the new policy doesn't mean people aren't getting arrested.
Instead, police have been trained to rely more heavily on aircraft and undercover units to follow suspects and to
lead patrol officers to them when they get out of their cars.
The Associated Press
Published: Sept. 21, 2006
PHOENIX — Police pursuits of fleeing drivers have been cut by 56 percent this year since a new policy took effect in
March that forbids the majority of pursuits on city roadways.
The new pursuit policy essentially allows officers only to chase people wanted for violent felony crimes — prohibiting
all chases for traffic violations, stolen vehicles, misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies.
The policy mirrors a nationwide trend to restrict pursuits in an attempt to protect the public from unintended car
crashes and deaths.
In the three-month period after Phoenix's policy took effect, the number of pursuits in the city fell 75 percent from
the same period the year before.
Still, Phoenix police say the new policy doesn't mean people aren't getting arrested.
Instead, police have been trained to rely more heavily on aircraft and undercover units to follow suspects and to
lead patrol officers to them when they get out of their cars.
Aircraft now are involved in 57 percent of police pursuits.
In 2002, before Phoenix police first started looking at their pursuit policy, officers chased 423 fleeing drivers. By
2005, that number had fallen to 67. This year, there have been only 22 car chases.
Since the implementation of the new policy, police said there have been only seven pursuits and none has ended
with a collision.
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