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Chief Officer Training Curriculum

Chief Officer Training Curriculum. Operations Module 12: Terrorist Incident Simulation Exercise. Objectives. Identify the elements of pre-incident planning for terrorist incidents Identify the elements of a Site Safety and Health Plan Identify potential terrorist incident complexities

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Chief Officer Training Curriculum

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  1. Chief Officer Training Curriculum Operations Module 12: Terrorist Incident Simulation Exercise

  2. Objectives • Identify the elements of pre-incident planning for terrorist incidents • Identify the elements of a Site Safety and Health Plan • Identify potential terrorist incident complexities • Establish incident objectives

  3. Objectives (continued) • Determine strategies • Select tactics • Identify and request resources • Select alternate solutions • Establish an appropriate ICS organization to manage a terrorist incident

  4. Pre-Incident Planning • Awareness of terrorist incident cues • Training • Equipment—safety, decon, treatment • Resources—local, state, and Federal • Capabilities and weaknesses of agencies

  5. Site Safety and Health Plan (SSHP) • Required for haz mat incidents: OSHA 1910.120 • Documents site safety: • Zone locations • Nature of hazard • Type of PPE • Type of decontamination procedures

  6. Community EOP • Assigns responsibility to organizations and individuals • Sets forth lines of authority and organizational relationships • Describes how people and property will be protected • Identifies resources available • Identifies steps to address mitigation

  7. State EOPs • State EOPs assist local jurisdictions • States respond to emergencies • States work with Federal government • State EOP is framework guiding Federal assistance

  8. HSPD-5 caused the creation of a National Response Plan (NRP) Integrates Federal Government domestic prevention, preparedness, response, and recovery plans into one all-discipline, all-hazards plan Provides the interface for working with the private sector Replaces the Federal Response Plan Coordinates other Federal plans Crisis and consequence management actions are consolidated under the NRP The NRP utilizes NIMS in response to domestic incidents National Response Plan (NRP)

  9. National Response Plan (NRP)(Cont’d) • Implemented when state’s resources cannot cope • Is the Federal plan for response to domestic terrorism • Details assistance available from Federal government • Describes organizational structure for assistance

  10. NRP Annexes • Emergency Support Functions (ESFs) increased from 12 to 15 – added: • Public Safety and Security (law enforcement) • Long-Term Community Recovery and Mitigation • External Affairs • Support Annexes – examples: • Volunteer and Donations Management • Worker Safety and Health • Incident Annexes – example: • Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex

  11. Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex • Purpose • To facilitate an effective Federal law enforcement and investigative response to all threats or acts of terrorism within the United States. • Policies • To ensure applicable Presidential directives are implemented in a coordinated manner, particularly those involving weapons of mass destruction (WMD), or chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, or high-explosive (CBRNE) material. • According to HSPD-5: • “The Attorney General (generally acting through the Federal Bureau of Investigation) has lead responsibility for criminal investigations of terrorist acts or terrorist threats …”

  12. Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex: Concept of Operations - The Response • Prior to an actual WMD or CBRNE incident, law enforcement, intelligence, and investigative activities generally have priority. • When an incident results in the use of WMD or CBRNE material, rescue and life-safety activities generally have priority. • Activities may overlap and/or run concurrently during the incident management, and are dependent on the threat and/or the strategies for responding to the incident.

  13. Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex:Concept of Operations - Command & Control • FBI personnel can be expected to integrate into the Unified Command organization in the following manner: • First FBI Special Agent (SA) or Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) member receives initial briefing from the Incident Commander - works closely with the Incident Commander as a member of the Unified Command • When relieved by more senior FBI SA, the first arriving SA or JTTF member moves to the Operations Section as the Deputy Operations Section Chief • An FBI SA assumes the position of Deputy Planning Section Chief

  14. Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex:Concept of Operations - Command & Control • Investigative and intelligence activities are managed by the FBI from an FBI command post or Joint Operations Center (JOC). • Intelligence Function • Manages the collection, analysis, archiving, and dissemination of relevant and valid investigative and strategic intelligence. • Fuses historical intelligence from a variety of sources with new intelligence specific to the threat, critical incident, or special event.

  15. Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex:Concept of Operations - Joint Operations Center • An interagency command and control center for managing multi-agency law enforcement activities • Similar to the Area Command concept within the ICS • The JOC is modular and scaleable and may be tailored to meet the specific operational requirements needed to manage the threat, incident, or special event

  16. Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex:Concept of Operations - Joint Operations Center Source: National Response Plan, Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex, November 2004

  17. Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex:Concept of Operations - Unified Command Source: National Response Plan, Terrorism Incident Law Enforcement and Investigation Annex, November 2004

  18. Categories of Terrorist Incidents CBRNE • Chemical • Biological • Radiological • Nuclear • Explosive

  19. Chemical Agents • Persistent—remain for hours, days, or weeks • Non-persistent—remain usually minutes or hours • Downwind hazard greater than haz mat • Liquid when contained—gases upon release • Influenced by weather • Can be protected against, treated, and decontaminated

  20. Law Enforcement • Interaction of local, state, and Federal agencies in public view • Physical evidence critical—recognize, collect, and preserve • Interviews and testimony—keep records • Photograph and videotape scene whenever possible

  21. Tactical Considerations • Understand scope of problem • Make notifications • Request adequate/specialized resources • Develop an incident organization • Protect personnel safety

  22. Tactical Considerations (continued) • Stabilize incident • Protect environment • Protect crime scene • Develop written plan • Deal with media

  23. Activity 12.1: Terrorist Incident Simulation Exercise

  24. U Street East Side U Street Looking South and East

  25. U Street East Side U Street West Side Gallivan Station Looking South And West

  26. U Street East Side Passenger Trolley 3 Sections 50 passengers Per Section U Street Looking South and East

  27. Back Side HR Building U Street Side HR Building

  28. Kent Building Gallivan Station U Street Looking North and East

  29. Kent Building 3 Story U Street Looking West

  30. Eight Story Bldg. East Side Kent Building 17th St. U Street Looking South

  31. Side D Side D Side B Side B

  32. Side B Side B Side D Side D

  33. Module Summary • Pre-incident planning • Written action plans • Operational considerations • Law enforcement considerations • Tactical objectives

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