In Part 3 of our Foundations of Church Security Teams series, we move beyond the initial response and focus on one of the most critical, and often overlooked, parts of a church security incident: what happens after contact is made with the threat.
This episode covers the realities of integrating with responding law enforcement, how to conduct effective handoffs during a critical incident, why communication failures create danger, and the importance of tracking personnel and cleared areas inside your facility. Adam McIntyre shares lessons from Special Operations leadership, practical guidance for casualty management, and why realistic, church-specific training matters far more than static range practice.
This episode provides practical insight into coordination, communication, room clearing, casualty response, and leadership under pressure. The next episode of this series will focus on radio communications.
Notes:
1:05 Finishing where we left off: what happens after an incident begins and law enforcement arrives?
1:50 Why the person maneuvering toward the threat should not “sit on the radio” during the response
3:00 How support personnel should direct responders
3:53 Why teams must continue clearing the threat area even after the suspect is neutralized
4:40 The importance of establishing a designated law enforcement handoff point at your church
5:30 Understanding “battle tracking” and maintaining accountability for everyone inside the facility
6:30 Why link-up procedures during an incident can become dangerous without proper tracking
7:20 Every member of a church safety team must know how to conduct the law enforcement handoff
8:12 Near and far recognition signals: visual identifiers, radio communication, and announcing arrivals
10:50 Holding off-duty police officers and experienced personnel accountable to church procedures
13:45 Why training must happen inside your actual church facility, not just on a range or in a shoot house
17:20 Why law enforcement maintains jurisdiction and the importance of avoiding conflict with responders
18:15 Maintaining cleared areas without surrendering ground unnecessarily
20:05 The importance of secondary searches and thoroughly checking any space where a person could hide
21:53 Adam explains why declaring an area “secure” was one of the most stressful leadership decisions in Special Operations
22:45 Why church teams gain an advantage by training in the same environment they protect
23:45 Center-fed vs. corner-fed rooms and how teams should practice both
24:55 Why teams should intentionally allow failure during training to improve adaptability
27:00 Responding to casualties while the event is still unfolding
28:30 The difficult reality of prioritizing stopping the threat before treating victims
29:20 Establishing casualty collection points near exits
30:15 Prioritizing injuries during mass casualty events and why deceased victims should not be placed in casualty collection points
32:00 Plain language vs. coded language during emergencies
35:30 The importance of radio training and why it’s one of the most overlooked low-cost skills for teams
40:00 The next episode of the series will focus entirely on communications training