Police Magazine Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Dave Smith: Pay Attention or Pay the Piper

Don’t let the distractions presented by police and private technology make you a casualty.

by Staff
August 28, 2025
Smiling cartoon police officer in tan uniform with badge, arms crossed

 

4 min to read


A guy double parks in downtown Manhattan and walks into an office building with a rifle. He kills an NYPD officer working off-duty providing security and three civilians before killing himself. 

Two Ohio, police officers are ambushed while having lunch. Both are wounded and one dies at a local hospital. A third arrives on scene to provide backup and is also wounded. The suspect was killed in a fierce battle with the three officers.

Ad Loading...

In Springfield, Oregon, two officers are stabbed while dealing with a miscreant who was described as a suspicious person in a vehicle.

These incidents illustrate that times are as dangerous now for law enforcement officers, if not more so, than they have ever been. There is no time for distractions or wasting our limited capacity focusing on things not relevant to our safety and the safety of others while on the job and off the job.

One big problem today is that technology continues to distract us. Smartphones, earbuds, laptops, tablets, digital procedures, and other distractors are everywhere. Write a ticket in the old days and you could quickly look up from your citation book to check the subjects around you. Today, you are sitting in the front seat of your car looking at the computer while creating a citation.

And if tying up your visual focus isn’t enough, pop those earbuds in to further limit your ability to attend to the world around you. I am a big fan of technology, but officer safety requires you to not only look, but see, to not only listen but hear, and not only at the conscious level, but at the intuitive level as well. In his marvelous book, “See What Others Don’t,” Gary Klein describes the process of insights and, as with so much of his research, it applies to high-risk professions like law enforcement, fire, military, and any other profession requiring split-second recognition of threats and instant responses.

The difference between what a veteran police officer sees and what a rookie officer observes is remarkable. And the difference between what a veteran officer sees compared to what a civilian is even greater. Civilians are not able to comprehend or even recognize why an officer did what he or she did because they don’t see what officers see. Noticing threat patterns, ambiguous patterns, or even simple contradictory actions requires an observer to do just that, observe.

Ad Loading...

Often the recognition by a veteran officer is so intuitive that he or she has difficulty explaining it in cognitive terms. It literally comes across as a feeling, a sense. The trouble is that today we have all this technology focusing us inwards or away from where any threat cues would be coming from.

I sometimes wonder if we should just put a label on every display screen used by law enforcement that says, “LOOK UP!” to remind us to check the real world around us.

At the same time, we still have all the usual suspects lowering our awareness and making us susceptible to attack. Chief among these is complacency. The effects of routine on human awareness and safety have long been recognized. And in another of Klein’s excellent books, “Sources of Power,” he explains how the very nature of routine makes it invisible, and constant, and just part of doing your job.

To combat all of this, we need to do a couple of things, and I emphasis, WE, not the agency, not the sergeant. You and I need to make ourselves safer, and harden the target so to speak.

First, “open” ear earbuds don’t block your hearing of the outside world as much as ones that go into the ear canal. Second, always ask yourself: “What doesn’t fit this scene? What could be a threat? Who could be a threat?” This isn’t paranoia, it’s preparation to quote the legendary police writer Chuck Remsburg.

Ad Loading...

Next, if you are texting or doing Facebook or TikTok and pretending to work on your phone, get into the habit of constantly looking up, checking for threats, and evaluating the environment. Finally, trust your gut, your intuition, your “Spidey Sense,” it has saved tons of cops’ lives.

Yes, my generation didn’t have all the distractors of today. Heck, we didn’t even have portable radios my first few years. But it was a dangerous time then as it now, and we checked our tires when returning to our vehicles because terror groups had bombed a crimefighter back East. Times have always been hard and hard men and women adapt and overcome.

The world has returned to the dark times of anti-police rhetoric and violence. So keep your head on a swivel. I remember a joke someone told in the department gym so often that a sign was put up that said it. And that joke still applies today just as then.

“Be Alert, the World Needs More Lerts!”

Dave Smith is an internationally recognized law enforcement trainer and is the creator of “JD Buck Savage.” You can follow Buck on Twitter at @thebucksavage

Topics:Patrol
Subscribe to our newsletter

More Patrol

Folds of Honor logo across the red portion of flag material.
PatrolFebruary 4, 2026

Folds of Honor Opens Scholarship Application for Children and Spouses of Fallen or Disabled Service Members and First Responders

The application period for the Folds of Honor scholarship program is now open through the end of March. Scholarships support students from early education through postsecondary studies, easing the financial burden for families who have given so much in service to others.

Read More →
Closeup of hands reaching to pick up a ballistic helmet and a Team Wendy logo in a white box top center in the image.
PatrolFebruary 4, 2026

Team Wendy Now on GovX: Faster Verification and Discount Access for Eligible Professionals

With GovX verification now integrated directly into the Team Wendy checkout experience, eligible customers can confirm their status in just a few clicks and have the discount applied automatically.

Read More →
backgroudn image of desert with inset 5.11 logo and images of pant and boot.
PatrolJanuary 28, 2026

5.11 Debuts 2026 Footwear & Apparel at SHOT Show

5.11 showcased new apparel and footwear products during SHOT Show 2026, including new color options for the A/T Boa Lite Mid Boot and the Founder’s Jacket.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Three tactical backpacks set against a desert background with an inset logo for 5.11.
PatrolJanuary 21, 2026

5.11 Debuts New Load-Bearing Gear at SHOT Show

5.11 launched a variety of new load-bearing gear, ranging from backpacks to chest packs, designed for training, travel, and everyday readiness, this week during SHOT Show 2026.

Read More →
Blue background with Streamlight logo at top and inset images of one handgun light, two rifle lights, and one handheld light.
PatrolJanuary 21, 2026

Streamlight Launches the Rechargeable TLR-3X & Other Lights at SHOT Show

Streamlight launched the TLR-3X and TLR-3X USB, two new weapon lights, and an assortment of other new lights during SHOT Show 2026.

Read More →
dark ballistic sunglasses against a blue smokey background
PatrolJanuary 21, 2026

EOTech & Fast Metal Introduce the EOTech Halen Ballistic Spectacle System

Built on the proven Halen platform, the new EOTech x Fast Metal Halen Ballistic Spectacle System is the only aluminum frame listed on the U.S. Army’s Authorized Protective Eyewear List.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Black background, outline of Florida, headline 2 Officers Shot
Patrolby Wayne ParhamJanuary 14, 2026

2 Florida Officers Shot After Shots-Fired Call

Two officers were shot in Gainesville, Florida, by a man who police say was leaving an area where he had killed a man inside a business. The suspect exited his vehicle in what the chief termed an “ambush-style” attack.

Read More →
Blue-tinted background photo of hand hanging up an office phone and headline Richmond Heights PD: Harassment and Threats Will Be Addressed Accordingly
PatrolJanuary 14, 2026

Mistaken Identity: Ohio Police Department Harassed After ICE OIS

An Ohio police department has received harassing phone calls and social media messages because it has an officer with the same name as the ICE officer identified in the Minneapolis, Minnesota, officer-involved shooting.

Read More →
Black background with POLICE logo, police light bar, and headline Top 10 Videos of 2025.
Patrolby Wayne ParhamJanuary 7, 2026

Top 10 POLICE Videos of 2025

What were the top videos published by POLICE in 2025? Many covered tactics and officer safety, while others came from booth visits at IACP in Denver, Colorado. In case you missed these, here are the top 10 videos.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Blue tinted background of a police dispatcher with headline Flock Safety + Coreforce Integation
TechnologyJanuary 7, 2026

Flock Safety and Coreforce Partner to Enhance Real-Time Awareness and Operational Efficiency for Law Enforcement

A new integration partnership will enable Flock Safety hotlist alerts and license plate recognition (LPR) searches directly in Coreforce’s Real-Time Crime Center (RTCC) and Digital Evidence Management System (DEMS) platform.

Read More →