Kansas City Preventive Patrol Experiment Summary

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Summarize the main hypotheses for each experiment, how the theory was operationalized, the research findings, and how these criminological research findings impacted social policy and police standard operating procedures (SOP), if any.
Kansas City Preventive Patrol Experiment: The particular hypothesis of this study was to test the legitimacy of the strategies that had been developed to combat crime. In October 1971, Kansas City Police Department formed taskforces to combat crime, combined on the South/Central/North/East and Special Operations division. The taskforce job was to isolate problems it was facing within its divisions and propose methods to combat the problems. The theory was operationalized by collecting a large amount of survey data, to include the following: departmental data, surveys of community residents, surveys of commercial managers, surveys of persons encountered by police, a response time survey, surveys of police officers, participant observer surveys, officer activity analyses. The findings showed the increasing or decreasing the police patrol had no significant effect on the crimes targeted; nor did the residents notice a difference when patrols efforts were changed. Crime rates didn’t differ over the areas of the study; neither satisfaction nor
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Upon arrival when the victim and suspect were both present an officer whom carried a pad of reports that were color coded for three (3) separate responses. When the officers responded to the domestic situation that fit the criteria they officers were asked to take the appropriate action that was listed on top of the pad. The suspect would be arrested, sent from the scene for eight (8) hours, or give advice (Sherman & Berk,