đ§Ș Case Study 7.3: The Worst Call of the Year
đ§Ș Case Study 7.3: The Worst Call of the Year
On-Scene Chaplaincy for Child Fatality: Emotional Containment, Brief Prayer, and Policy-Aligned Care
Learning Goals
By the end of this expanded case study, you should be able to:
- Identify multi-layer dynamics (trauma load, moral injury risk, family grief, identity pressure, and scene volatility).
- Apply a scene-safe chaplain framework: arrive-and-align, stabilize presence, protect dignity, contain emotion, pray briefly (with consent), and plan follow-up.
- Use field language that supports without overreaching or âtaking over.â
- Recognize what not to do and avoid common chaplain errors under adrenaline.
- Implement boundary map reminders (limits, access, pace, authority, safety) in a high-risk setting.
- Develop a 24â72 hour follow-up pathway that fits police culture and agency policy.
Scenario (Realistic Critical Incident)
It is 2:18 a.m. Patrol is dispatched to a âchild not breathingâ call in a small apartment complex. Multiple units arrive. EMS is already working when officers enter. Family members are crying and pleading. A supervisor takes command. Neighbors begin gathering outside.
Within minutes, the outcome becomes clear: the child has died.
A detective arrives to begin the investigation. Officers establish scene control. EMS transitions into documentation procedures. Family grief escalatesâloud crying, anger, and accusatory statements toward responders.
The supervisor requests the chaplain:
âChaplainâget here now. Itâs bad. Officers are shaken, and the family is coming apart.â
You arrive within 12 minutes. You park away from the core scene, check in at the perimeter, and walk in calmly, mindful that your tone and posture will be read immediately.
Whatâs Happening Beneath the Surface (The âHidden Layersâ)
A critical incident is never only what is visible.
1) Trauma load (sensory + helplessness)
This scene includes:
- graphic exposure or disturbing details (even without visible gore)
- intense family grief and panic energy
- âhelplessness pressureâ (nothing could reverse the outcome)
- crowd, media possibility, and procedural intensity
Chaplains should expect acute stress responses that may appear as agitation, shut-down, or emotional numbing.
2) Identity pressure in police culture
Police culture often rewards composure, control, and function under stress. In child-fatality calls, officers can feel:
- a protector identity collapse (âI couldnât stop itâ)
- shame about bodily reactions (shaking, nausea, tears)
- fear of being judged for emotion
3) Moral injury risk (without wrongdoing)
Moral injury can arise when the soul experiences a deep sense of âstainâ or violation of what should be true:
- âChildren shouldnât die like this.â
- âWe arrived too late.â
- âI canât get that image out of my head.â
- âThis job is changing me.â
The chaplainâs lane is not therapy, but containment, dignity, and referralâhelping the person stay human and connected to appropriate supports.
4) Anger as armor
Some officers will become sharp, controlling, or sarcasticânot because they are heartless, but because anger keeps them from collapsing. If a chaplain confronts anger publicly, escalation may increase.
5) Family grief becomes accusation
Families in shock may lash out:
- âYou didnât do enough!â
- âWhere were you?â
- âThis is your fault!â
This can trigger responder defensiveness, which escalates conflict and may complicate scene operations.
6) Second-wave crash (later)
Even those who appear stable may experience delayed reactions:
- intrusive images
- nightmares
- irritability
- avoidance
- spiritual withdrawal
- family spillover stress
Chaplains should anticipate the âsecond waveâ and plan for follow-up.
Key Characters (Three People, Three Needs)
Officer Diaz (10 years on) â âFrozen Functioningâ
Diaz stands near the hallway. Pale face. Fixed stare. He follows commands but appears emotionally absent.
Likely internal state: shock/dissociation. His body is operating, but his mind is partially offline.
Officer Kim (newer) â âOverwhelm and Panicâ
Kim is shaking, breathing fast, repeating: âI canât⊠I canâtâŠâ
Likely internal state: acute panic. Risk of impaired functioning if unsupported.
Officer Barnes (veteran) â âAnger and Controlâ
Barnes snaps at bystanders and family members. He is tense, commanding, escalating the perimeter.
Likely internal state: anger as a cover for distress; adrenaline spike; fear of losing control.
Chaplain Mission Statement (Stay in Your Lane)
At the scene, you are not:
- incident command
- investigator
- negotiator unless authorized
- media spokesperson
- clinician providing treatment
You are:
- a calm, policy-aligned presence
- an emotional container
- a dignity protector
- a bridge to peer support, EAP, clinicians, and pastoral follow-up
- a brief prayer resource (consent-based, non-performative)
Chaplain Action Framework (Expanded)
Step 1: Arrive and Align (Authority + Policy First)
You locate the supervisor/incident commander before approaching anyone emotionally.
Say:
- âWhere would you like chaplain support right nowâofficers, staging, or family area?â
- âAny policy boundaries for family contact, scene access, or media presence?â
Why this matters: command alignment prevents role confusion and protects trust.
What not to do:
- entering restricted areas without authorization
- approaching the family without clear approval and timing
Step 2: Position for Safety and Usefulness
Choose a location where you are:
- visible to responders
- out of operational flow
- protected from crowd pressure
- able to move quickly to an officer in distress
Safety reminders:
- keep situational awareness
- do not stand between officers and a volatile crowd
- avoid becoming isolated with a distraught person in a risky location
Step 3: Address the Highest Safety Need First (Kim)
Kimâs panic suggests immediate impairment risk.
You approach slowly, calm voice, minimal words.
Say:
- âIâm here with you.â
- âOne slow breath with meâjust one.â
- âYouâre safe right now. One step at a time.â
If Kim cannot settle after a brief attempt:
- you coordinate with a supervisor: âHeâs overwhelmedâdo you want him paired and moved to staging?â
What not to do:
- âCalm down.â (often escalates shame)
- âTell me what you saw.â (too invasive, wrong timing)
- turning this into a long coaching session on the scene
Step 4: Support Diaz (Shock / Dissociation)
Diaz may not be ready for words.
Say quietly:
- âIâm here. You donât have to talk.â
- âYouâre safe right now.â
- âOne breath with me.â
You remain present, respectful, not demanding eye contact.
Why this works: containment restores safety without pressuring disclosure.
What not to do:
- âYouâre in shock.â (labeling can feel exposing)
- âYou need to talk about it right now.â
Step 5: Reduce Escalation With Barnes (Anger)
You do not correct Barnes publicly. You offer a low-key support cue.
Say privately (if possible):
- âI can see this is hitting hard.â
- âLetâs take ten secondsâjust enough to reset.â
- âWe can hold the line without escalating the crowd.â
If Barnes refuses, you do not argue. You remain calm, and you update command only if safety or operations are compromisedâusing neutral language.
What not to do:
- shame Barnes (âYouâre being unprofessional.â)
- spiritualize anger (âYou need to repent right now.â)
- become a mediator unless command assigns you that role
Step 6: Brief Prayer (Only With Consent and Timing)
You do not pray âover the sceneâ for an audience.
To an officer who seems receptive:
- âWould you like a brief prayerâabout 10 seconds?â
Sample prayer (10â15 seconds):
âGod, be near right now. Give strength and steady hands. Protect each responder. Comfort the grieving. Help us do the next right thing. Amen.â
If prayer is not welcomed, your presence still ministers.
Scripture anchor (WEB) if appropriate and welcomed:
- âGod is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.â (Psalm 46:1, WEB)
What not to do:
- explain the tragedy through prayer
- pray in a way that pressures emotion or compliance
Step 7: Plan the Second Wave (24â72 Hours)
You coordinate a follow-up pathway with leadership:
- station return support (who is most affected)
- peer support activation
- EAP / clinician access (policy-aligned)
- chaplain check-in schedule (brief and respectful)
Say to the supervisor:
- âWhen they return to the station, would you like me there for a brief check-in?â
- âIs peer support activated? If not, do you want help coordinating that?â
- âWho do you want me to prioritize for follow-up today?â
What not to do:
- become the only support channel
- promise ongoing counseling beyond your role
- bypass leadership or policy pathways
âWhat to Sayâ and âWhat Not to Sayâ (Expanded)
Field-Safe Phrases (Support Without Overreach)
- âIâm here with you.â
- âYouâre not alone.â
- âOne breath. One step.â
- âDo you want quiet presence, or a brief prayer?â
- âDo you want me close, or do you want space?â
- âWhen youâre ready, we can connect you to peer support.â
Phrases NOT to Say (High Harm in Trauma)
- âGod needed another angel.â
- âEverything happens for a reason.â
- âAt leastâŠâ (minimizes pain)
- âYouâll be fine.â (invalidates bodily reality)
- âTell me exactly what happened.â (wrong timing; can be investigative)
- âThis will make you stronger.â (forces meaning too soon)
Boundary Map Reminders for This Scene
- Limits: You cannot carry everyone; pick the highest-need moments and stay steady.
- Access: Do not pry; do not cross operational boundaries; respect restricted information.
- Pace: Donât rush prayer, disclosure, or meaning; let people stabilize first.
- Authority: Align with command; donât function as leadership or investigator.
- Safety: Position wisely; watch for impairment; refer when needed.
Mini-Debrief (When Appropriate and Allowed)
Laterâat the station or after the callâpolicy may allow a short, voluntary check-in.
Keep it brief:
- âHow are you holding up right now?â
- âWhat do you need for the next hour?â
- âDo you want quiet presence, prayer, or a follow-up later today?â
Avoid forced group debriefs unless your agency uses a structured peer support protocol. Chaplains should be careful not to impose emotional processing as a requirement.
Referral and Reporting (Policy-Aware)
Referral cues
- inability to function safely
- extreme panic that does not settle
- ongoing dissociation
- escalating substance use as immediate coping
- severe sleep collapse over time
- intrusive images that intensify
- hopelessness or isolation that grows
Referral phrase:
âI care about you. Letâs connect you with the right support in the department. I can stay with you while we do that.â
Reporting cues
Follow policy and local law for:
- imminent threats of self-harm or harm to others
- mandated reporting categories (varies by jurisdiction)
- severe impairment creating safety risk
Truthful boundary phrase:
âI will treat what you share with care and discretion, and I will follow policy if safety concerns come up.â
Reflection + Application Questions
- Who did you approach first in this scenario, and why?
- Name one âbeneath the surfaceâ dynamic for each: Diaz, Kim, and Barnes.
- Which drift risk is most tempting for you under pressure: fixing, fishing, forcing, performing, or command drift? Why?
- Write three field-safe phrases you would use with (a) shock, (b) panic, and (c) anger.
- Write three phrases you will never use at a scene like this, and explain the harm they can cause.
- Draft a 15-second prayer that is consent-based and avoids explanation, performance, or pressure.
- What follow-up plan would you propose for the next 24â72 hours (station return, peer support, chaplain check-in, EAP/clinician referral)?
- Which boundary category will be most tested for you on scene: limits, access, pace, authority, or safety? What is your plan to stay aligned?
Academic References (credible resources for crisis scene support)
- International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. (2018). Psychological First Aid: Guide for Field Workers.
- Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC). (2007). IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings.
- National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN) & National Center for PTSD. (2006). Psychological First Aid: Field Operations Guide.
- World Health Organization, War Trauma Foundation, & World Vision International. (2011). Psychological First Aid: Guide for Field Workers.
- Everly, G. S., & Mitchell, J. T. (2000). The Debriefing âDebateâ and Crisis Intervention: A Review of Psychological Debriefing and Critical Incident Stress Management. International Journal of Emergency Mental Health, 2(4), 211â225.
- Violanti, J. M. (2014). Dying for the Job: Police Work Exposure and Health. Charles C Thomas Publisher.
- Litz, B. T., Stein, N., Delaney, E., Lebowitz, L., Nash, W. P., Silva, C., & Maguen, S. (2009). Moral Injury and Moral Repair in War Veterans: A Preliminary Model and Intervention Strategy. Clinical Psychology Review, 29(8), 695â706.