Unit Name: | FBI Special Weapons and Tactics Teams |
Dates: | 1973 – present |
Country: | United States |
Agency: | Federal Bureau of Investigation |
Type: | SWAT |
Sworn Type Label: | Full time team members |
Sworn: | 26[1] |
Unsworn Type Label: | Part time team members |
Unsworn: | 1,073 |
Subunit Type Label: | Teams |
Subunits: | 56 (field offices)[2] |
Programmes: | --> |
FBI Special Weapons and Tactics (FBI SWAT) Teams are specialized part-time SWAT teams of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The FBI maintains SWAT teams at each of its 56 field offices throughout the United States.[2] Each team is composed of a varying number of certified SWAT operators, dependent on office size and funding.
In 2022, SWAT teams had approximately 1,600 callouts.
Following the Wounded Knee Occupation in 1973, the FBI established a SWAT program.[3] [4] In the summer of 1973, six field offices Albuquerque, Denver, Kansas City, Omaha, Phoenix and Washington, established SWAT teams of five members.[3] The teams went to the FBI Academy at Quantico to train for a few weeks with the FBI Firearms Training Unit and also spent some time with military Special Forces.[3] [4]
FBI SWAT teams are specially trained to serve warrants and intervene in high-risk incidents such as active shooters, barricaded suspects, or protection for personnel or dignitaries.[5] [6] [7]
FBI SWAT teams are trained to a national standard and utilize the same equipment which enables a team to provide assistance to another Field Office Team. SWAT teams can be dispatched to aid local law enforcement with limited resources to manage large-scale high-risk incidents.
Several factors can determine the deployment of FBI SWAT. Some of those factors are:
The SWAT Operations Unit (SOU), part of the Critical Incident Response Group, oversees the FBI SWAT program.[9] The SOU is responsible for developing standardized training, procedures and tactics, and for research and development including equipment, for the SWAT teams to ensure interoperability for multiple-office deployments. During multiple-office deployments the SOU provides planning assistance and oversight.[2]
Candidates for SWAT teams have to pass selection which includes fitness and marksmanship assessments.[10] [3] SWAT selectees then have to complete a ten-day course over 10 weeks known as the New Operator Training School (NOTS) afterwhichthey are able to serve on a SWAT team, but not on every aspect of operations, such as room entries.[11] After a probationary period that may last six to eighteen months, the new team members are sent to SWAT Basic a three week course at the FBI Training Academy in Quantico for full certification.[11] [3] SWAT teams train on average 32 hours a month.[1]
Nine FBI SWAT teams are designated as "Enhanced" SWAT teams and are specially trained to be able to assist/augment the full-time national Hostage Rescue Team if needed.[12] Enhanced SWAT teams are typically located at larger field offices and comprise a larger number of personnel than standard teams, in addition to having increased access to additional tactical equipment and methods.
FBI SWAT is known to use the M4 carbine, Heckler & Koch MP5/10, Remington 870, Remington 700, various Glock models (17 Gen4, 19M, 20), SIG Sauer P226, and Springfield Armory 1911 Professional Custom.
FBI SWAT also uses ballistic shields, stun grenades, enforcer battering rams, sledgehammers, Halligan bars, and gas masks, among other equipment.[13]
FBI SWAT uses a variety of armored SWAT vehicles, including the Lenco BearCat, Humvee, various MRAP models, and occasionally tracked armored personnel carriers. A variety of civilian-style vehicles are also used when necessary (such as to avoid attention), often unmarked SUVs, vans, or pickup trucks produced by subsidiaries of Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis.
In film and television, FBI SWAT appears in films such as Face/Off (1997), The Town (2010), (2011), and (2017), and television shows such as FBI, Criminal Minds and The Blacklist (2013).
FBI SWAT also appears in several video games, such as SWAT 4 (2005), Payday 2 (2013), Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege (2015), Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands (2017), Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Breakpoint (2019), and Ready or Not (2021).