đ§Ș Case Study 3.3: The Sergeant Asks What You Heard
đ§Ș Case Study 3.3: The Sergeant Asks What You Heard
Learning Goals
By the end of this case study, you should be able to:
- Respond to supervisory pressure with calm clarity and role integrity.
- Protect confidentiality without becoming defensive or unhelpful.
- Identify and resist triangulation (being pulled into conflict systems as a messenger or information source).
- Use field-ready phrases that are policy-aware and trust-preserving.
- Apply the boundary map: limits, access, pace, authority, safety in a realistic situation.
Scenario: âJust tell me if weâre good.â
Youâve served with this departmentâs chaplain program for several months. You do roll call drop-ins, occasional ride-alongs, and informal check-ins. You have built rapport by being consistent, calm, and non-intrusive.
Two nights ago, after a difficult call, Officer Rivera asked if you had a minute in the parking lot before heading home.
Riveraâs tone was flat. Their eyes looked tired. Their hands kept movingâopening and closing their car door, then stopping, then starting again.
Rivera said:
- âIâm not sleeping.â
- âI keep replaying the scene.â
- âI snapped at my spouse.â
- âI donât know whatâs wrong with me.â
- âIâm fine at work⊠but at home Iâm not.â
Rivera did not describe misconduct. Rivera did not make threats. Rivera did not ask for special favors. Rivera asked for something simple:
- âCan you just⊠be here for a minute?â
You listened. You kept your voice steady. You asked permission before offering anything spiritual:
- âWould it help if I prayed with youâshort and simple?â
Rivera nodded.
You prayed briefly. No performance. No sermon. Just presence and a few quiet words asking God for mercy, sleep, stability, and protection.
Before Rivera left, you offered one practical step:
- âWould you be open to a follow-up tomorrow? We can also talk about support options if you wantâpeer support, EAP, counseling, or just another check-in with me.â
Rivera said:
- âYeah⊠tomorrow.â
Two days later
Youâre walking past the squad room when Sergeant Kline steps into the hallway and lowers their voice.
Kline says:
- âHey Chaplain⊠Rivera seems off. I heard you talked the other night. What did Rivera say?â
Then Kline adds: - âIâm not trying to be nosy. I just need to know if weâre good. You knowâsafety, readiness, all that.â
Klineâs tone is not hostile. Itâs pressured. The sergeant looks tired too.
This is the moment.
Whatâs happening beneath the surface
Officer Rivera
Rivera may be carrying:
- Acute stress symptoms (sleep disruption, intrusive replay, irritability)
- Moral fatigue (âI should be able to handle thisâ)
- Shame about needing help
- Family spillover stress (the badge comes home)
- Fear of consequences (being judged, being pulled from duty, being labeled unstable)
Rivera chose you because chaplains can feel safer than formal systemsâif chaplains handle confidentiality correctly.
Sergeant Kline
Kline may be carrying:
- Responsibility for operational safety (keeping the unit safe)
- Anxiety about missing warning signs
- Concern for Rivera as a person
- Pressure from above (performance, staffing, liability)
- Uncertainty about chaplain rules (what can be shared, what cannot)
Klineâs question may be part care, part risk management, part stress.
The chaplain pressure point
You may feel:
- The urge to âhelpâ by giving details
- Fear of seeming uncooperative
- A desire to be respected by leadership
- The temptation to become a backchannel
- Confusion: âIf I donât share, am I failing safety?â
This is where ethics becomes practical. This is where trust is either protectedâor spent.
The ethical problem: Triangulation and role drift
This scenario is a classic triangulation moment.
Triangulation happens when someone tries to pull you into a relationship triangle:
- Officer â Chaplain â Sergeant
so the chaplain becomes the pathway for information, influence, or pressure.
If you share details, even small ones, several things happen quickly:
- Rivera learns you are not safe, and future disclosure collapses.
- The chaplain becomes a surveillance role in the eyes of officers.
- Leadership begins to view the chaplain as an âinformation source.â
- Your ministry shifts from presence to managementâeven if you never intended it.
This is why ethical clarity must be decided before these moments happen.