HPD Officers receive Awards Recognition (Copy)

HPD Officers recognized at the South Bay Medal of Valor Awards Ceremony

Daily Breeze article HERE

Photo: Erick Chavez, HCTV


Officer Gomez Live Saving Award

On August 5, 2021, at 1306 hours, members of the Hawthorne Police Department were dispatched to the area of Crenshaw Boulevard and Rosecrans Avenue in regards to a stabbing victim. Officers arrived on scene within minutes and began to canvass the area, looking for the involved parties. After an exhaustive search of the area, officers were unable to locate any victims. Prior to leaving the scene, police dispatch advised that Gardena police officers were responding to the 14700 block of Crenshaw Boulevard for a battery victim.

Believing that the calls might be related, Hawthorne police officers began responding to the area to determine if the calls were related. Officer Gomez was the first to arrive on scene. Upon arriving on scene, Officer Gomez located the victim of a stabbing. After determining that the scene was safe, he began rendering aid. Officer Gomez assessed the victim for injuries. He found that the victim had two significant stab wounds to the upper right portion of his back. Since the victim was suffering from difficulty breathing and due to the location of the injuries, Officer Gomez determined that the injuries would benefit from medical intervention. Officer Gomez cleaned the area around the wounds and placed chest seals over the injuries to help prevent any additional air from going into the pleural place and further compromising breathing.

Based on the injuries and symptoms, it was clear the male was suffering from a life-threatening medical emergency and required emergent medical intervention. Had Officer Gomez had not responded in such a timely manner and had he not provided such rapid medical treatment, it is possible that air would have continued to enter the pleural space through both the penetrating injuries. Left untreated these injuries would likely have fatal consequences.

The actions of Officer Gomez are noteworthy and it reflects great credit upon himself as well as the Hawthorne Police Department. Officer Gomez should be commended for his quick and decisive action and exemplary during a tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving incident.


Officer Luttenbacher Life Saving Award

On February 6, 2021, Officer Bearet Luttenbacher responded to a call of a gunshot victim behind an illegal gambling casino. On arrival, Officer Luttenbacher quickly checked the scene to ensure that he and others there were safe. Based on the initial search and the reports from witnesses that the shooter had fled, he turned his attention to the gunshot victim who appeared to be shot in the leg.

As other officers arrived on scene, Officer Luttenbacher determined that the subject might have a life threatening bleed. He did not notice a large amount of blood on the ground, but based on the location of the injury in the upper thigh and the grotesquely swollen thigh, he concluded that he might be bleeding into his thigh without obvious external bleeding.

Luttenbacher exposed the victim’s wounds and applied a tourniquet to the injured leg, slowing or stopping the bleeding. He also noted that the leg itself appeared to be unstable, suggesting a femur fracture due to the impact of the bullet.

Luttenbacher’s quick assessment and decisive application of the tourniquet very likely resulted in saving the victim’s life. Despite not seeing a large amount of blood externally, he realized that the bleeding into the thigh, which is dangerous in and of itself, presents a greater threat because it is easy to overlook. If the tourniquet was not applied, it is likely that the victim would have continued to bleed due to the femoral artery injury and possibly expired.


Life Saving Award

Hawthorne patrol officers John Yoshida, Jesse Lopez, and Richard Valadez were dispatched to the Courtyard Marriott located at 4427 W. El Segundo Blvd in regards to a juvenile who possibly drowned.

Upon arrival, officers immediately noticed a crowd of frantic people in the pool area of the hotel. As they approached the scene, they noticed that several people were providing CPR for a 5-year-old female who was pulseless and apneic, with only intermittent agonal breaths.

Officer Yoshida, who is a department EMT, along with Officers Lopez and Valadez immediately recognized that their training and experience far surpassed the civilians who were providing aid for the child and they took over the responsibilities of CPR. Officer Yoshida began administering high quality chest compressions for the victim while Officer Lopez recovered his department issued medical bag from his police vehicle. Officer Lopez retrieved the AED from the medical bag and Officer Valadez simultaneously grabbed the bag mask valve (BMV) and immediately began rescue breathing for the victim.

Due to the child still not responding, all three of the officers determined that it would be advantageous to quickly dry the victim off and place the AED pads on the victim in case the situation became worse, remembering to place them correctly for a child's small frame. After placing the AED on the child, they continued with CPR and were advised by the AED to continue with the CPR since the child was "not shockable". The officers preformed life saving measures for a total of three minutes before the Los Angeles County Fire Department arrived on scene and relieved them.

Shortly after the fire department arrived, the child began to breath and regurgitated the water she had in her lungs. When the child began to cry it was an overwhelming sense of satisfaction for Officers Yoshida, Lopez, and Valadez. Prior to transporting the child, the firefighters and paramedics on scene turned to all three of the officers and told them they did a great job and thanked them for their quick response.

Officer's Yoshida, Lopez, and Valadez should be commended for their quick response, remaining calm during a highly stressful situation, and great communication/teamwork while saving the life of a 5-year-old child.


Distinguished Service Award

Doctor Joe Nakagawa began his service with the Hawthorne Police Department as a volunteer in 2007. Although a fulltime emergency room physician, Doctor Nakagawa volunteered his time with the Hawthorne Police Department’s SWAT Team. Whenever the team had training, warrants or call-outs, Doctor Nakagawa ensured that he made himself available to provide any assistance as needed.

Almost instantaneously, he felt at home within the organization and understood the innovative vision of the organization. Within just a short time, the Hawthorne Police Department Tactical Medicine Program was changing the way medical services were provided to the citizens of Hawthorne.

In addition to donating his time for the department’s operational needs, Doctor Nakagawa began instructing department members and teaching valuable medical skills. These skills have been taken to the streets and has been credited with saving the lives of countless citizens. In 2010, Doctor Nakagawa became a reserve officer, where he was able to bring his expertise to the streets of Hawthorne as a peace officer.

Although extremely active within the police organization, Doctor Nakagawa was still trying to find ways to better amalgamate law enforcement and medical services as a means to better serve the citizens of Hawthorne. Furthermore,

Doctor Nakagawa wanted to bring a focus to employee health. In 2020, just prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Doctor Nakagawa was hired as a fulltime police officer. Although a capable sworn peace officer with the City of Hawthorne, Nakagawa also became the Hawthorne Police Department’s Medical Director.

This proved to be a critical asset to the Hawthorne Police Department, as we, like the rest of the world, were learning how to navigate the pandemic. Doctor Nakagawa’s expertise and leadership through the pandemic helped mitigate the effects of the virus on our organization and staff, while it raged through society. Over the course of the pandemic, Doctor Nakagawa has overseen the recovery of our staff, continually assessed for any further need of treatment and coordinated over six hundred inhouse COVID-19 tests.

Doctor Nakagawa has also aided in the City’s response to the pandemic by coordinating testing and vaccine clinics for citizens and employees alike. Doctor Nakagawa made himself available to all staff, answering phone calls and emails at all times of day and night. Doctor Nakagawa’s office door is always open and he is always available to talk with. His presence within the department has also proved priceless, with his active engagement and readiness to aid. He has recognized critical medical emergencies occurring amongst our department staff members.

On one occasion, Doctor Nakagawa reviewed a diagnostic exam performed by a Hawthorne Police Department paramedic. Upon reviewing the results of the exam, Doctor Nakagawa recognized and confirmed that a medical emergency was occurring. He was able to activate the emergency medical services at a local hospital to expedite the treatment and care of the individual in need; all while he was across the globe. This rapid recognition and expedient treatment of a life- threatening medical emergency ultimately saved the employee from lifelong impairment.

Doctor Nakagawa’s influence does not just stop at the walls of the Hawthorne Police Department and with medical engagement of employees and their family members. Doctor Nakagawa also goes out on the streets and proactively engages with some of society’s less fortunate to ensure that they are receiving medical treatments that they need. He enters into unhoused communities around the city and provides medical services otherwise not available to them and ensures that these individuals are never overlooked. They are offered free COVID-19 tests, open wounds and sores are cleansed and bandaged. Their medical complaints/aliments are acknowledged and assessed for any further need of treatment.

Through his instruction, engagement and dedication to the employees and citizens, Doctor Nakagawa’s influence has reached thousands of officers and citizens from around the City of Hawthorne and the world alike.

He is to be commended for his selfless acts and distinguished service to law enforcement and the City of Hawthorne.


From the Daily Breeze article:

When the coronavirus pandemic hit in 2020,  Dr. Joe Nakagawa just started a new job: the former emergency room physician had become a police officer.

Drawing on his medical background, Nakagawa taught other officers how to provide health care, visited homeless encampments to tend to the sick, and set up coronavirus testing and vaccination sites.

His work saved countless lives, Hawthorne Police Chief Michael Ishii said Thursday at an awards banquet for South Bay first responders who’ve gone beyond the call of duty.

“(Nakagawa) changed the way we look at policing, and his expertise helped train our officers to act quickly when life-saving measures are needed,” Ishii said.

Nakagawa was one of 11 South Bay first responders honored for their bravery at the 46th annual Medal of Valor Ceremony hosted by South Bay Police and Fire Memorial Foundation, which represents the cities of El Segundo, Gardena, Hawthorne, Hermosa Beach, Inglewood, Manhattan Beach, Palos Verdes Estates, Redondo Beach and Torrance.

Three officers — including Nakagawa — received the Distinguished Service Award, and eight the Lifesaving Award.

The Distinguished Service Award is presented to first responders whose efforts exemplify the finest standards of the police and fire departments, while the Lifesaving Award goes to those who take extraordinary action to save lives. Only police were nominated this year.


Officer Broc received the EMS Recognition Medal

Life Saving Award

On November 3, 2021, Officer John Broc was working a uniformed patrol shift in the city of Hawthorne when he was dispatched to investigate an unknown issue in the parking lot of a laundromat. When he arrived, he was confronted with a special needs man who was crying and distraught over his brother, who appeared to have died.

Broc simultaneously comforted the special needs family member while assessing his brother, who was blue and apneic. He was able to involve the family members in the rescue and redirected them while he retrieved his medical bag. While the person appeared to be deceased, he did have a pulse and Broc correctly surmised that due to the person's young age, his apnea, and constricted pupils, that he may have suffered an overdose from an opioid.

Without hesitation, Broc deployed two doses of naloxone, which resulted in the person making a complete recovery, going from apneic, blue, and unresponsive to speaking normally. Broc was able to establish rapport with the distraught family member while simultaneously managing an opioid overdose alone until relieved by fire department paramedics who arrived later.

Due to Broc’s quick actions and communication skills, he was able to prevent anoxic brain injury and minimize the impact to the victim’s family, particularly, the special needs man who he cared for. His actions demonstrate the deep caring law enforcement has for the community and the importance of training officers to initiate care in the critical minutes before fire department medics arrive.

Of note, his clear and rational thought processes were narrated by Broc in real time to the Axon body worn camera, giving us insight into his mindset and decision-making. He was correctly able to verbalize the indications for naloxone administration prior to deploying it, demonstrating his understanding of what he was doing and why.


Sergeant Mike Murray

HPD Officer Mike Murray, October 2015

When I first became a police officer I thought I knew what my job would entail. I knew I had to find bad guys and take them to jail before they could hurt someone. My first few years were full of, “hooking and booking” and I loved every moment of it. As I matured, I began to realize that there was much more to police work than I had imagined.  I watched too many people die too early and I often found myself wondering if I could have done something more. I began looking at the different opportunities in law enforcement which would allow me to broaden my scope.

Being a member of the Special Weapons and Tactics team was one of those opportunities. I looked up to many of the officers on the team and admired their teamwork, camaraderie, and their knack for achieving whatever they set out to do. I knew I wanted to be a part of that team. 

Upon achieving that goal, my entire perception of police work changed. I found what my career had seemed to be lacking and I discovered what true community service and commitment was about. The Hawthorne Police Department SWAT team had a select team of officers and medics whose responsibility was to ensure the safety of the team and the public during operations. This TACMED (Tactical Medicine) team was created with public safety in mind and I knew I wanted to be a part of it! I trained with our medics, volunteered for EMT school and earned by certification as an EMT shortly after joining the team.

The first major test of my skills learned in EMT school and as a SWAT medic occurred while my fiancée and I were traveling along a major freeway here in Southern California. While we were driving at highway speeds, I saw several cars ahead of me swerving around something lying in the roadway. As I came upon the object, I noticed that it was not an object at all, but a downed motorcyclist. An on duty officer was already on scene, but he seemed overwhelmed by the death which was occurring in front of him.  

I got out of my car and grabbed my department issued medical bag and made my way towards the motorcyclist.  As I reached the bleeding and unresponsive man, the officer began to tell me that I needed to get back into my vehicle. When I identified myself as an off duty officer and informed him of my training, I could see the look of relief spread across his face. He told me that he simply did not know what he could do for the injured motorcyclist.

I ran through our TACMED trauma protocols in my head, trying to find injuries and cataloging them in level of importance so that I might treat the critical ones first. I felt a hand on my shoulder and turned to see my girlfriend. Like the other officer at the scene, I almost ordered her back into the car before remembering that her nursing experience could be a great asset to the injured motorcyclist. After my initial evaluation, I knew that the biggest concern was the victim’s compromised airway from the massive facial injuries that he had sustained. 

Several other passersby exited their vehicles to watch what was occurring and I was met with some criticism as I prepared to roll the subject into a recovery position to clear the subject’s airway of the blood and saliva which were choking him.  I clearly remember hearing someone repeating what they always see and hear on television, “You’re not supposed to move him; he might have a neck injury!”  In tactical medicine, there are priorities you want to address quickly; not being able to breathe is one of them. While moving him might possibly exacerbate a neck injury, letting him die from lack of oxygen was certainly a greater issue at the moment. Keeping the victims neck as stable as possibly, I gently rolled the man into a recovery position to allow his airway to open up. It did the trick.  

Helping the blood, teeth, vomit, and saliva to clear from the man’s airway allowed him to do something amazing for a person who had just smashed his face into the pavement at nearly seventy miles per hour; he began to regain consciousness. Approximately fifteen minutes later, the fire department was able to find their way through the traffic and arrived on scene. 

Once the motorcyclist was transported, the first officer came over to me and thanked me for the assistance. As I drove off, several thoughts ran through my mind. The incident reminded me of the times in my career where I was that officer standing over a critically injured person; praying that the fire department would hurry up and get there so “something” would be done. I remember feeling that same helpless feeling that I had just seen expressed in that officer’s face and eyes. I also realized that I was truly fortunate to be part of a department which truly cared about their citizens, and was also willing to put the time, effort and money into making sure we were as prepared as we could be should we find ourselves in a similar situation. 

“Officer down” and “baby not breathing” are two calls which send chills down the spine of even the most seasoned officer. Unfortunately, we will all hear these calls come over the radio at some time during our career. Regardless of how many times you might have heard them, your heart will pound, adrenaline will surge through your body, and you will charge towards the scene at full speed. On the way, you will also pray for paramedics to get there quickly.  However, we learn early in our careers that, in most circumstances, we will generally beat the fire department to most calls simply because we are already in the field driving around. In addition, it is not uncommon for fire personnel to refrain from entering “hot” scenes until they confirm that we (the police) have rendered them safe. What that really means is that we have to keep the victims alive until they get there. 

On an unseasonably warm December morning, I was driving around in my black and white patrol vehicle wondering what the day was going to bring. Although it was not even 0800 yet, I had already handled several radio calls and the day was shaping up to be another busy one. Just then, dispatch broke the silence of my patrol car with those dreaded words:  “Attention units, fire responding to a three week old baby not breathing.” Once I heard the address I knew that I would beat the fire department to the scene. I immediately informed dispatch that I would be responding. As I charged down the busy city streets towards the child, I went over what I would need to do when I got there. I repeated the current infant cardiopulmonary standards out loud to myself over and over. I wanted to make sure that I would make no mistakes while I worked on the child and to ensure that there were no doubts in the parent’s minds that I was doing everything within my power to keep their child alive. When I reached the address, I quickly went to the trunk of my car and grabbed the “Stat Pak” medical bag that my department had just placed into each patrol vehicle. The medical bag contained resuscitation gear for adults and children as well as an automated electronic defibrillator, so I had all the tools I would need for this situation. 

As I ran towards the apartment complex, I could hear a woman screaming for help. I did what all cops do in such situations, I sprinted towards the screams. Upon reaching the apartment where the screams were coming from, I was met by a panicked father who stammered “Man, you gotta help my kid…” I stepped into the small apartment and immediately noticed all of the cute children’s clothing and toys that littered the small, yet tidy living room.  It was clear the parents loved their child very much.

I pushed my way into a cramped bedroom and found a mother sobbing over what looked like a lifeless baby lying on the bed. I immediately threw the medical bag on the bed next to the child and began a rapid assessment. The bluish-gray skin tone of the baby gave it an unreal quality, like something you see on television. I saw that the child was taking occasional intermittent gasps but nothing near enough to support life. As quickly as I could I checked the child’s airway but did not see any obstruction that might be preventing proper respirations. I also determined that the child had a very rapid, yet weak pulse. Since the child had a heartbeat, I began assisting its breathing through use of the “bag valve mask” supplied in all our medical kits. With the first breath, I saw the chest rise and fall and knew that I had successfully gotten air into the child’s lungs. In what would be an excruciatingly long five minutes, I continued to breathe for the child until fire personnel arrived and took over. By the time they got there, the baby had begun to regain color and the pulse became stronger and stronger.  Fire personnel took over treatment and soon transported the baby to the hospital.

I remember getting back to my car and finding myself shaking as I responded to the adrenaline dump that was coursing through my body. Even though I had received EMT training and held current accreditation, I still found myself asking that same question I had asked myself prior to my medical training:  Had I done everything that I could?  This time though, I could honestly tell myself that I had. I later followed up on the baby’s condition and was told that after spending some time in the hospital the child made a complete recovery. The skills that I had been given by my department and through the EMT program saved a life that day; an accomplishment, and a blessing, that I will cherish for the rest of my life. 

Within a month of the “baby not breathing call,” I would be faced with another critical incident that would test my skills. I was working on a simple crime report when I heard an emergency broadcast that an officer from a neighboring agency had been shot numerous times and mutual aid was being requested. I apologized to the victim I was talking to and told him that I would be back. I ran to my police car and sped towards the local community college where the shooting took place. I again found myself planning on what I was going to do when I arrived on scene: I would ensure the officer was in a safe place, look for and stop extreme bleeding that would kill him quickly, manage their airway and monitor their breathing. I then went through each step and rehearsed how I would successfully complete each task. When I arrived, officers on scene told me that officers had been involved in a shooting and that the suspect had been hit numerous times by gunfire, but no officer had been injured. 

Figuring I might be able to help, I made my way to where the suspect was lying and found a large contingent of officers standing around him. The suspect had been disarmed and was handcuffed, but there were no medical services being rendered. I asked the officers standing over the suspect if they needed any assistance and quickly learned they were just waiting for fire personnel to arrive and start treatment. It only took one glance to tell me that they young man needed treatment now! I knelt down next to him and began to conduct a rapid assessment of his injuries. It was clear that he was critically wounded and needed immediate help. I called out to an officer from my agency to grab the “Stat Pak” from the trunk of one of our patrol cars and bring it to me. 

The man had been hit by several rounds from a patrol rifle and and had significant bleeds as well as injuries that needed immediate attention. As I performed the assessment, I glanced over and was relieved to find my SWAT team commander working on the man alongside me. Within a minute, we had a medical bag and each of us was tending to different injuries. My SWAT commander was placing chest seals on the entrance and exit wounds of the suspect’s torso to prevent a fatal buildup of air.  I was tending to a major bleed in the subject’s armpit area and an arm that had nearly been severed by the gunfire and an outside agency officer (who had also been through our tactical medicine class) was tending to wounds on the subject’s lower extremities.  

We stayed with the subject, keeping him calm and treating his wounds, until fire personnel arrived on scene and transported the man to a local trauma center. Over the next several weeks, people asked me on several occasions why we had worked so diligently on an armed subject who pointed a firearm at officers. I would merely respond, “Because it was the right thing to do!” It was later determined that the “firearm” located at the scene was a replica and that a suicide note had also been left. The note detailed the sad life of a troubled teenager who wanted to end his suffering, and decided to do so by forcing officers to kill him. The teen ultimately survived the incident, which I am sure was a relief to not only for his family, but also for the officers forced into such a traumatic course of action. 

Although the TACMED team takes great pride in the successful saves, they also take great pride in being able to teach these same invaluable skills to members of the public, other law enforcement officers and other SWAT teams. These skills are passed on with the hope of providing the public with first responders who are willing and able to take steps to preserve life both on and off duty. 

One off-duty patrol officer from of our department is the embodiment of why we take so much pride in our teaching and our program. While attending a volleyball tournament for one of his daughters, the officer observed another parent collapse in the bleachers of the crowded and hot gym. He made his way towards this mother and with the help from additional parents, she was carried from the stands onto the floor.  Although everyone initially believed the female was suffering from heatstroke, the officer found during his assessment that the mother had stopped breathing and no longer had a pulse. He recognized the severity of the situation and immediately began cardiopulmonary resuscitation. While performing CPR, a bystander brought the officer an AED (automated electronic defibrillator), which he applied to the still lifeless mother. The AED advised a shock was needed and the officer applied the electronic shock. A subsequent assessment was completed and the officer found the mother had regained her pulse.    She was taken to the hospital by paramedics and made a complete recovery. This officer never told anyone of the incident nor did anyone at the department know of his lifesaving actions until the woman called and informed the department of his heroic acts. Because of his actions, that officer ensured that a mother would live on to see her daughter grow up. While he could have just waited for fire personnel to arrive and care for the woman, like so many others do, he decided to use the skills he had been taught and to take lifesaving action. That his efforts saved a life that day speaks volumes about the quality of officers we have here at the Hawthorne Police Department. 

These incidents are just a few examples of saves which occurred as a result of the training and equipment provided by the Hawthorne Police Department. There have been many other incidents in which our officers have taken their training and equipment and applied it for the betterment of others. These skills have been used both on and off duty and in all manner of circumstances. From small injuries which they treated with a bandage and a kind word, to the application of CPR in hopes of bringing a person back from the brink of death, our officers have truly served the citizens of our great community in more than the traditional sense. In this new model of 21st century policing, we are now active participants in the preservation of life.

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In Their Own Words: Tactical-Medicine Physicians

From U Magazine.  Original Article here

"Shots fired! Officer down! Officer down!" Moments later comes the response: "Making entry. Roll fire. Code 3."

John Pi, M.D., at FBI SWAT Tactical Medical Training.Photos: Valerie Walker

John Pi, M.D., at FBI SWAT Tactical Medical Training.Photos: Valerie Walker

Rushdi Cader, M.D. ’95 (standing), demonstrates wound care.

Rushdi Cader, M.D. ’95 (standing), demonstrates wound care.

A life is at stake. Waiting for trained medical support will decrease the wounded officer's chance for survival. But with some basic medical training, non-medical first-responders can improve the odds. That is the role of the tactical-medicine physician, to educate and train law-enforcement officers in such medical procedures as tourniquet application, airway management, splinting and wound care.

Rushdi Cader, M.D. '95, Joe Nakagawa, M.D. '00, and Atilla Uner, M.D., M.P.H. '02, who completed his residency in emergency medicine at UCLA in 1997, teach lifesaving techniques to local and federal law-enforcement officers. Drs. Nakagawa and Uner support the Hawthorne Police Department, while Dr. Cader founded SWAT Trauma Assistance Training (STAT), a company that manufactures tactical-training products and provides tactical-medicine instruction throughout the state. As an FBI agent for 15 years, John Pi, M.D., another UCLA emergency-medicine resident (1996), is among the nation's foremost experts in tactical medicine. Currently, he is a supervisory special agent based in Washington, D.C.

"Tactical physicians typically sacrifice an inordinate amount of their time and resources for the protection of law-enforcement officers. It is a passion born out of a physician's respect and admiration for those who keep Americans safe. As part of their job, tactical physicians find themselves in the back of an armored vehicle, treating the injured and hoping their team returns safely. SWAT docs like Drs. Nakagawa, Pi and Uner are a special breed: part physician, part law enforcement, and all heart! They are truly selfless. Simplifying emergency-medical care for tactical operators through easy to-learn acronyms and hands-on training creates a cohesive team of informed participants instead of a disarray of passive and frantic observers. The tactical environment is one in which a few measures applied rapidly and with familiarity by the first officer on scene can save the life of a fellow officer. If in the years that we do this work, one officer is saved, all of the sacrifice is worthwhile." 

- Rushdi Cader, M.D. '95
Medical Director, San Luis Obispo Regional SWATPresident, SWAT Trauma Assistance Training
Attending Physician, Sierra Vista Medical Center

"Tactical emergency medicine is simply a specialized form of conventional emergency medicine adapted to save lives in law- enforcement tactical situations. By focusing on life-threatening and limb-threatening conditions that can easily be reversed by simple medical and tactical procedures, tactical medical operators stand in the front line of law enforcement to deliver sound tactics and medical care to save lives." 
Atilla Uner, M.D., M.P.H. ’02 (right), during defibrillator training.
- John Pi, M.D.
Supervisory Special Agent, FBI, 
Critical Incidence Response Group, National Assets Response Unit


Emergency medical services (EMS) is the science of providing medical care in an out-of-hospital setting. In order to give lifesaving treatment to the acutely ill and injured with the limited supplies and diagnostics we can carry, we have to distill emergency medical care down to its most essential components. It requires the utmost expertise and skill to know what to do when and what to leave out. Tactical EMS is simply a necessity. We cannot let injured officers remain without help when a crime scene is not secure. And we cannot put private or fire-department ambulance personnel in harm's way by sending them into tactical situations for which they are not prepared."

- Atilla Uner, M.D., M.P.H. '02
Tactical Physician, Hawthorne Police Department
Associate Medical Director, UCLA Center for Prehospital Care

Joe Nakagawa, M.D. ’00 (center), during defibrillator training.

Joe Nakagawa, M.D. ’00 (center), during defibrillator training.

Atilla Uner, M.D., M.P.H. ’02 (right), during defibrillator training.

Atilla Uner, M.D., M.P.H. ’02 (right), during defibrillator training.

"I see tactical medicine as my way to help those men and women who put themselves in harm's way to help others. Law enforcement is a dangerous job, yet for so long officers were not given the tools and knowledge they needed to help themselves or their partners. We're here to fix that situation."

- Joe Nakagawa, M.D. '00
Medical Director, Hawthorne Police Department
Emergency Medicine Physician, Torrance Emergency Physicians Group

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