Defensive Tactics and Restraints
Key Takeaways
- Defensive tactics: officer safety, minimum injury, rapid control.
- Check cuff fit, search after cuffing, notify supervisor.
- Restraint chairs/four-point need medical and supervisory oversight.
- Monitor breathing and circulation at policy intervals.
- Restraints are not punitive discipline devices.
Defensive Tactics and Restraints
Quick answer: Control fast; cuff per policy; check fit; search; monitor; elevated restraints need medical.
Goals
Officer survival, inmate safety, stabilize, transition to restraints.
Post-cuffing
Fit check, pat search, supervisor/medical as needed, document injuries.
Elevated restraints
Restraint chair / four-point: medical approval, continuous observation, time limits.
Pain compliance
Ends when resistance stops; punitive restraint on compliant inmate = excessive force.
Florida Statute and FAC Anchor Points
| Source | SOCE focus |
|---|---|
| FAC 33-602.210 | Force continuum, reporting, medical eval |
| FS 776.07 | Deadly force — escape and imminent threat |
| FS 944.35 | Excessive force as officer misconduct |
| Graham standard | Objective reasonableness at the moment |
Worked SOCE Scenario A — Defensive Tactics and Restraints
A Florida correctional officer faces a Pearson VUE stem tied to defensive tactics and restraints. Examiners embed one changed fact — resistance level, whether a disciplinary hearing occurred, whether medical was notified, or whether contraband was logged — to flip the best answer. Your method: (1) identify immediate safety needs; (2) name the controlling FS 944 or FAC 33-602 rule; (3) select the answer that includes required supervisor notification, medical follow-up, due process, or chain-of-custody steps. Lawful tactical choice plus missing documentation is still wrong on the SOCE.
Worked SOCE Scenario B — Institutional Sequence
Mid-shift at a state correctional institution, staff must choose between a fast informal fix and full policy compliance. FDLE training consistently rewards the complete sequence: secure the scene, notify command, provide medical when injury or force occurs, write factual reports before shift end, and refer contraband or serious misconduct to investigations. Distractors that say "wait until next shift," "handle verbally only," or "ignore until someone complains" violate Florida administrative expectations.
High-Frequency Trap Matrix
| Trap answer | Why it fails |
|---|---|
| National generic policy | SOCE tests Florida FS/FAC |
| Skip medical after force | FAC 33-602.210 requires evaluation |
| Punitive seg without hearing | Wolff due process |
| Staff-inmate "consent" | PREA prohibits all sexual contact |
| Deadly force for passive refusal | Start verbal/continuum low |
| Destroy contraband casually | Chain of custody required |
90-Second Exam Drill
Read the last sentence of the stem first. Underline resistance, confinement type, population (juvenile, pregnant), and first vs. final action. Eliminate incomplete options. When two seem lawful, pick the one with documentation and notification.
Study Routine Checklist
- Closed-book recite Florida sources for this topic
- Draft one factual incident-report paragraph from a vignette
- Cross-link to adjacent SOCE domain (force↔medical, search↔discipline)
- Score 80% on a 10-item mini-quiz before advancing
Supervisor and Medical Notification Matrix
| Event | Notify supervisor | Medical evaluation |
|---|---|---|
| Reportable use of force | Immediately | Required for involved inmate |
| Contraband weapon/drugs | Immediately | If injury or exposure risk |
| Escape / missing inmate | Immediately | If injury during apprehension |
| Inmate suicide attempt | Immediately | Emergency medical response |
| Routine count complete | Per policy | Only if medical issue observed |
Documentation Before Shift End
Florida institutions expect incident reports, use-of-force narratives, and contraband forms before officers leave duty unless documented supervisor-approved exceptions exist. SOCE items treat deferred paperwork as a wrong answer even when front-line force was reasonable.
Final Review Drill
Before leaving this section, answer closed-book: Which Florida statute criminalizes contraband introduction? Which FAC rule governs use-of-force reporting and medical evaluation? What scored percentage passes the Corrections SOCE? Write one factual incident-report sentence documenting supervisor notification after a reportable use of force in a Florida state institution housing unit.
Peer Accountability and CJSTC Standards
Florida correctional officers who observe another employee striking a compliant inmate must report through the chain of command or PREA reporting channel — silence may violate FS 944.35. The SOCE tests whether you distinguish lawful force from retaliatory or punitive contact. When a stem describes force continuing after compliance, the correct answer always includes stopping force and documenting the initial lawful portion separately from any excessive portion.
Supervisor and Medical Notification Matrix
| Event | Notify supervisor | Medical evaluation |
|---|---|---|
| Reportable use of force | Immediately | Required for involved inmate |
| Contraband weapon/drugs | Immediately | If injury or exposure risk |
| Escape / missing inmate | Immediately | If injury during apprehension |
| Inmate suicide attempt | Immediately | Emergency medical response |
| Routine count complete | Per policy | Only if medical issue observed |
Documentation Before Shift End
Florida institutions expect incident reports, use-of-force narratives, and contraband forms before officers leave duty unless documented supervisor-approved exceptions exist. SOCE items treat deferred paperwork as a wrong answer even when front-line force was reasonable.
Final Review Drill
Before leaving this section, answer closed-book: Which Florida statute criminalizes contraband introduction? Which FAC rule governs use-of-force reporting and medical evaluation? What scored percentage passes the Corrections SOCE? Write one factual incident-report sentence documenting supervisor notification after a reportable use of force in a Florida state institution housing unit.
Peer Accountability and CJSTC Standards
Florida correctional officers who observe another employee striking a compliant inmate must report through the chain of command or PREA reporting channel — silence may violate FS 944.35. The SOCE tests whether you distinguish lawful force from retaliatory or punitive contact. When a stem describes force continuing after compliance, the correct answer always includes stopping force and documenting the initial lawful portion separately from any excessive portion.
After cuffing following resistance:
Restraint chairs require:
Punitive cuffs on compliant inmate: