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Tactics and
Collision Investigations
October 13, 2007 (San Dimas, CA)
Police-Writers.com is a website that lists over 770 state and local police
officers who have written books. The website added police officers who have
written about
police tactics and
traffic collision investigations.
Captain
James Stalnaker of the
San Bernardino County Sheriffs Department has
over 39 years of experience in law enforcement. Prior to becoming a law
enforcement official, he spent six years in the military. During
James Stalnakers law enforcement career he has
had assignments in corrections, patrol, detectives, internal affairs and
SWAT. His law enforcement
leadership experience includes working as a
sergeant in patrol, the training coordinator for his
SWAT team, the executive officer of the San
Bernardino County Sheriffs Departments Training Division; commanding officer
of the Narcotics/SWAT
detail and as an Patrol Station Commander. James
Stalnaker is the author of Building Search: Tactics for the
Patrol Officer.
Although written primarily for
patrol officers, Building Search: Tactics for the Patrol Officer,
presents search concepts and tactics that can also be used effectively by
SWAT teams, narcotics officers, probation and
parole officers, and security officers. Building Search: Tactics for the
Patrol Officer is packed with advice and practical tactics devised and
used by a law enforcement veteran with nearly 40 years of law enforcement
experience, from the streets to homicide and SWAT as an operator and
supervisor. This book isn't about theory. The author has searched every type
of building and has devised a tactical search method that is simple, effective,
and emphasizes officer safety first.
David Casteel, senior collision analyst,
provides consultation and expert witness services to governmental and private
sector clients in the areas of
traffic collision causation, analysis and
reconstruction. Before joining the Ayres Group in 1992,
David Casteel worked for the San Diego City
Attorneys Office as a litigation investigator and collision analyst for more
than six years. He was member of the
San Diego Police Department for thirteen years.
David Casteel is qualified as an expert in
accident reconstruction in superior, municipal, federal court and arbitration.
He has completed a variety of
accident investigation, collision analysis,
biomechanics and other related courses at the University of North Florida, Long
Beach State University, University of California, San Diego and holds a B.S. in
mathematics (engineering emphasis). He also is lecturer in the field and
co-author of Basic Collision Analysis and Scene Documentation and
Pedestrian Accident Reconstruction and Litigation.
Jerry Eubanks has been involved in the
investigation and reconstruction of
traffic collisions for more than twenty-five
years. From 1976 to 1978,
Jerry Eubanks was a reserve police officer. For
seven years, he worked as a regular and traffic police officer for the
San Diego Police Department.
Jerry Eubanks assisted in the development and
instruction of 40-hour basic and 40-hour advanced
traffic collision investigation courses. He is
an ACTAR Accredited Reconstructionist who also operates a successful business
as an expert witness in the field. His client base is both varied and
international sides in criminal and civil cases.
Jerry Eubanks has been involved in more than
1172 crash tests, of which more than 388 have involved pedestrian, and over 121
bicycle impacts. He has taught Pedestrian Accident Reconstruction courses at
Boise State University, the Canadian Police College, and between 19902001 he
was an adjunct instructor for the Texas Engineering Extension Service, Texas A&M
University system. In 2002, he started to instruct for Collision Safety
Institute (CSI) in California. He is the co-author of Pedestrian Accident
Reconstruction and Pedestrian Accident Reconstruction and
Litigation
Police-Writers.com now hosts 774
police officers (representing 350 police departments) and their 1658
law enforcement books in six categories,
there are also listings of United States federal law enforcement employees
turned authors, international police officers who have written books and
civilian police personnel who have written books.
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