Rhode Island Municipal Police Academy L.E.A.D.S. Law Enforcement Active De-escalation Strategies 3 Day Instructor Training…
Maine – Law Enforcement Active De-escalation Strategies 3 Day Instructor Training
Skowhegan Police Dept. Maine
L.E.A.D.S.
Law Enforcement Active De-escalation Strategies
3 Day Instructor Training
Aug 4 – 6, 2026
0830 – 1630
The award-winning L.E.A.D.S.™ (Law Enforcement Active De-escalation Strategies) program was developed in 2007 and has become one of the most recognized and widely implemented de-escalation training systems for law enforcement and corrections professionals throughout the United States.
Unlike many contemporary de-escalation programs, L.E.A.D.S.™ has been field-tested and refined through nearly two decades of real-world application by street officers, deputies, corrections personnel, and trainers nationwide—from Honolulu to Alaska. The program emphasizes practical, measurable, and operationally sound communication and decision-making strategies designed for the realities of today’s public safety environment.
Through a dynamic mix of lectures, demonstrations, role play, and scenario-based applications, students will learn to:
- Recognize and manage aggressive behaviors before they escalate.
- Employ positive communication and proven de-escalation techniques.
- Anger management and confrontation avoidance strategies.
- Emotional modulation when responding to highly emotional incidents.
- Discuss tactical responses when diffusion is ineffective or inappropriate.
- The “Switch” Moment – In high-conflict encounters, there is often a distinct moment when the subject’s behavior shifts from verbal resistance to active aggression. Recognizing this switch is a critical skill.
- Cognitive Lock – Officers can get “stuck” in a single tactic under stress, repeating the same ineffective commands instead of transitioning to a new approach.
- Articulation Matters – In litigation or review, you will not be judged solely on the fact you used force, but on whether you can clearly articulate why verbal tactics were no longer appropriate.
- Officers effectively de-escalate on a daily basis, however there is no evidence to validate. Officer learn to document, quantify and measure evidence to show patterns of success.
- Integrated Training – Strategies on how verbal, physical, and tactical options must be trained together, so the transition between them is seamless.
Certification, Instruction Manual, Digital and Hard Copy with PowerPoints
ONLY $695.00
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What separates this program from many modern de-escalation courses is its grounding in behavioral science and its practical application in the field.”
Sgt. James Pittman, Leon County Sheriff’s Office – De-escalation Research Project with Florida State University
Skowhegan Police Dept. – 51 East Madison Rd Skowhegan, ME
Deputy Chief Scott Christiansen
Schristiansen@skowhegan.gov / Phone# 207-474-6908