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Fatal Grievances: Forecasting and Preventing Active Killer Threats in School, Campus, and Workplace Settings takes a proactive view of active killer threat management and resolution with the goal of preventing the attack before it occurs.
Fatal Grievances: Forecasting and Preventing Active Killer Threats in School, Campus, and Workplace Settings takes a proactive view of active killer threat management and resolution with the goal of preventing the attack before it occurs.
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Autorenporträt
Gregory M. Vecchi earned a B.S. in Management/Human Resources from Park University, Parkville, Missouri, an M.S. in Criminal Justice from the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and a Ph.D. in Conflict Analysis and Resolution from Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He currently serves as a Professor of Criminal Justice and Homeland Security at Keiser University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and he is the Principal of VGI Consulting and Training. Dr. Vecchi has over 30 years of law enforcement experience. Dr. Vecchi formerly served as the Chief of the FBI Behavioral Science Unit and career FBI negotiator. In these positions, he gained extensive experience assessing and interacting with violent offenders, as well as researching, training, and conducting threat assessments. Dr. Vecchi has conducted dozens of workplace threat assessments for Fortune 500 companies.
Mary Ann Markey received a B.A. in Psychology and an M.A. in Psychology from Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, and Ph.D. in Conflict Analysis and Resolution from Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. She currently serves as an Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Ringling College of Art and Design, Sarasota, Florida while continuing to conduct research on intra-family violence and homicide, mass murder, and serial murder.
Jeffrey A. Daniels earned a B.A. in Psychology at Metropolitan State University, Denver, Colorado, an M.S. in Counseling Psychology from Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington, and a Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology from the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska. He is currently a professor in the School of Counseling and Well-Being at West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia. Dr. Daniels has been engaged in research pertaining to violence and violence prevention for over 23 years and he has engaged in collaborative research with the FBI for over 16 years using Perpetrator-Motive Research Design.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface
Chapter 1. Introduction And Orientation to Active Killer Threat Assessment
Scope of this book
A paradigm shift from active shooters to active killers
A change in mindset from being reactive to proactive
Assessment versus analysis
Threat intelligence collection and assessment
The problem with "profiling" active killers
The importance of operationalizing definitions
Chapter 2. Active Killer Characteristics: Myths Vs. Statistics
Myth 1: active killers are everywhere
Myth 2: active killers are only a problem in the United States
Myth 3: disgruntled students and employees are the only threat to safety
Myth 4: the attacker just "snapped"
Myth 5: demographics can identify an active killer
Chapter 3. Direct Behaviors of Planned Lethal Violence
Active killer motivations
Grievance as a precursor of lethal violence
Grievance and the crisis state
The fatal grievance pathway
Planned lethal violence
Direct behaviors and stages of planned lethal violence
Direct behavioral clusters of planned lethal violence
The planned lethal violence stairway model
Chapter 4. Indirect Behavioral Indicators of Planned Lethal Violence And Situational Distressors
Indirect behaviors
Primary indirect behavioral indicators
Secondary indirect behavioral indicators
Stress and violence
Situational distress
Situational distressors
Chapter 5. Threat Management and Resolution: Identifying The Threat
The necessity of structure in active killer threat assessment
Forensic investigation and behavioral analytical methods
Contextual factors
Factors of social desirability
The role of social fabric in threat assessment
Detecting behavioral indicators of planned lethal violence
Baselines and anomalies
Establishing baselines and identifying anomalies
Bias and error considerations in detecting concerning behavior
Chapter 6. Threat Management and Resolution: Assessing The Threat
The problem with relying on "pre-attack behaviors" in threat assessment
Understanding significancy and frequency of anomalies
Prediction and threat assessment
Forecasting in threat assessment
Qualitative and quantitative forecasting
Predictive analytics and modeling
Predictive behavioral threat forecasting
Methodology
Qualitative adjustments to threat confidence levels
Completing the threat assessment
Bias errors in assessing a threat
Chapter 7. Threat Management and Resolution: Engaging The Threat
Chapter 1. Introduction And Orientation to Active Killer Threat Assessment
Scope of this book
A paradigm shift from active shooters to active killers
A change in mindset from being reactive to proactive
Assessment versus analysis
Threat intelligence collection and assessment
The problem with "profiling" active killers
The importance of operationalizing definitions
Chapter 2. Active Killer Characteristics: Myths Vs. Statistics
Myth 1: active killers are everywhere
Myth 2: active killers are only a problem in the United States
Myth 3: disgruntled students and employees are the only threat to safety
Myth 4: the attacker just "snapped"
Myth 5: demographics can identify an active killer
Chapter 3. Direct Behaviors of Planned Lethal Violence
Active killer motivations
Grievance as a precursor of lethal violence
Grievance and the crisis state
The fatal grievance pathway
Planned lethal violence
Direct behaviors and stages of planned lethal violence
Direct behavioral clusters of planned lethal violence
The planned lethal violence stairway model
Chapter 4. Indirect Behavioral Indicators of Planned Lethal Violence And Situational Distressors
Indirect behaviors
Primary indirect behavioral indicators
Secondary indirect behavioral indicators
Stress and violence
Situational distress
Situational distressors
Chapter 5. Threat Management and Resolution: Identifying The Threat
The necessity of structure in active killer threat assessment
Forensic investigation and behavioral analytical methods
Contextual factors
Factors of social desirability
The role of social fabric in threat assessment
Detecting behavioral indicators of planned lethal violence
Baselines and anomalies
Establishing baselines and identifying anomalies
Bias and error considerations in detecting concerning behavior
Chapter 6. Threat Management and Resolution: Assessing The Threat
The problem with relying on "pre-attack behaviors" in threat assessment
Understanding significancy and frequency of anomalies
Prediction and threat assessment
Forecasting in threat assessment
Qualitative and quantitative forecasting
Predictive analytics and modeling
Predictive behavioral threat forecasting
Methodology
Qualitative adjustments to threat confidence levels
Completing the threat assessment
Bias errors in assessing a threat
Chapter 7. Threat Management and Resolution: Engaging The Threat
Conflict management vs. conflict resolution
Monitoring
Third-party intervention
Direct interventions
Engagements based on threat level
Chapter 8. Limitations And Conclusion
Summary of key takeaways
Limitations
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Index
References
Rezensionen
"This book breaks into bite-sized pieces the most complicated part of stopping threats to help readers identify a potentially violent person and apply proven avenues to prevent the next catastrophe."
Katherine Schweit, Author of Stop the Killing. Creator of the FBI's Active Shooter Program
"This book expertly incorporates the theory and practice of crisis and hostage negotiation in effectively engaging potential active killer threats. It is a refreshing 'Who Cares Wins' approach to preventing violence."
Dr Gilbert Wong, Life Honorary Consultant of the Hong Kong Police Negotiation Cadre (PNC). Commanding Officer of the PNC (2010 - 2021). Former Chief Superintendent of Police
"A highly thoughtful and originally conceived study, this volume offers a unique, and systematic, way of evaluating so-called active killers, which challenges many orthodox assumptions that have governed previous approaches to the threat. The ultimate value of this book is that it presents new ways of thinking, and a new hope, for dealing with the scourge".
M.L.R. Smith, Chair of Strategic Theory, Department of War Studies, King's College, University of London. Co-author of Sacred Violence: Political Religion in a Secular Age
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