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==Police sieges== {{Distinguish|Police action|Shootout}} [[File:LAPD SWAT Truck Hostage.jpg|thumb|A [[Los Angeles Police Department]] [[LAPD Metropolitan Division|Metropolitan Division]] truck at the scene of a standoff in 2009]] Siege tactics continue to be employed in [[police]] contexts; such a siege is typically called a '''standoff''' or, in law enforcement [[jargon]], a '''barricade situation'''. Standoffs may result from crimes and incidents such as [[Robbery|robberies]], [[Police raid|raids]], [[Search warrant|search]] and [[arrest warrant]]s, [[prison riot]]s, or [[Terrorism|terrorist attacks]]. Standoffs occur due to a variety of factors, most prominently the safety of police (against whom the besieged may have the upper hand), the besieged [[suspect]]s (who police generally intend to [[arrest]]), bystanders (who may be in the [[crossfire]]), and [[hostage]]s (who may be injured or killed by the suspects). The optimal result of most standoffs is a peaceful resolution: the safe extraction of hostages and bystanders, and the peaceful surrender and arrest of the hostage-takers. To ensure this, police make use of trained [[Crisis negotiation|negotiators]] and [[Criminal psychology|psychologists]] to learn the hostage-takers' demands (and meet said demands if feasible or permissible), gain the hostage-takers' trust, clarify that police do not intend to kill them or will even [[Crime scene getaway|let them go]] (regardless of whether such claims are true), and coax the hostage-takers into surrendering or at least releasing hostages. In the event a peaceful resolution is impossible—negotiations fail or do not proceed, hostages are released but the hostage-takers refuse to surrender, the hostage-takers resist violently, or hostages are killed—police may respond in force, generally being able to rely on [[police tactical unit]]s or even [[military]] support if possible and required. [[File:Training Exercise at NAS Whidbey Island DVIDS371387.jpg|thumb|[[Washington State Patrol]] [[SWAT]] attempting to arrest a suspect during a simulated standoff in 2011]] Most standoffs are much shorter than military sieges, often lasting hours or days at most. Lengthy sieges may still occur, albeit rarely, such as the 51-day-long 1993 [[Waco siege]]. Most standoffs end in a peaceful resolution (i.e. [[1973 Brooklyn hostage crisis]], [[1997 Roby standoff]]), though some may end in a police or military assault (i.e. 1994 [[Air France Flight 8969|Air France Flight 8969 hijacking]], 1980 [[Iranian Embassy siege]]) or, in the worst-case scenarios, the deaths of authorities, hostage-takers, or hostages (i.e. 1985 [[1985 MOVE bombing|MOVE bombing]], 1985 [[EgyptAir Flight 648|EgyptAir Flight 648 hijacking]], 2004 [[Beslan school siege]], 2022 [[Robb Elementary School shooting]]). The aforementioned worst-case scenarios often result from poor planning, tactics, or negotiations on the part of the authorities (e.g. accidental killings of hostages by [[Unit 777]] during the EgyptAir Flight 648 hijacking), or from violent acts committed by the hostage-takers (e.g. [[Suicide attack|suicide bombings]] and executions during the Beslan school siege). In some jurisdictions, depending on certain circumstances, standoffs that would usually be handled by police may be transferred to the military. For example, in the [[United Kingdom]], standoffs with terrorists may be transferred to military responsibility for a military assault on the besieged. The threat of such an action ended the 1975 [[Balcombe Street siege]], but the 1980 [[Iranian Embassy siege]] ended in a military assault and the deaths of all but one of the hostage-takers.
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