Snatch squad

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A snatch squad refers to two tactics used by police in riot control and crowd control.

Snatch squad in riot control

The snatch squad in riot control involves several police officers, usually in protective riot gear, rushing forwards, occasionally in flying wedge formation to break through the front of a crowd, with the objective of snatching one or more individuals from a riot that are attempting to control the demonstration at which they are present. The target may be a leader or a speaker, or someone who seems to be leading the crowd.

In one British form of the tactic, 3 or 4 officers rush at a group of violent or disorderly people with two of the officers carrying batons and the others a shield. The officer with the shield rushes the most violent in the group and forces the subject between the shield and a fixed object, while the other officers either arrest the others or escort them out of the crowds.

Plainclothes snatch squads

A snatch squad may also refer to plainclothes police officers apprehending individuals, often in a looting situation. Often the plainclothes police officer(s) will mingle with crowds intent on causing trouble and appear to be a bystander. The undercover officers can arrest any individual attempting to break or loot a store, often in an isolated scenario with few crowds as not to provoke retribution against the officers.

This tactic was used in the 2011 England Riots, most notably by Greater Manchester Police who deployed this tactic in Manchester city centre on 9 August 2011.[1]

Snatch Squads may be indistinguishable from an illegal kidnapping or arrest until hours or days after the incident. Jaggi Singh was detained in this manner during the 1997 APEC Summit protests at UBC, in Vancouver, BC. Witnesses tried to intervene to protect Jaggi, assuming the arrest was unlawful (And indeed, the legality of the arrest was never proved, as the police dropped the charges that had warranted the arrest after the protest). This sort of tactic may lead to dangerous violent confrontations with bystanders genuinely believing they may need to use force to stop a crime. It is an intimidating tactic that has some resemblance to tactics of secret police.

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References

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