Author Topic: FM 3-39-40  (Read 3168 times)

santahog

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FM 3-39-40
« on: May 09, 2012, 09:29:17 AM »
With friends like these, who needs hallucinations!..

Tyler Durden

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Re: FM 3-39-40
« Reply #1 on: May 09, 2012, 12:10:36 PM »
Hmm... Interesting....

Back when my then live in girlfriend was in the Reserves she had to watch online training vidoes  One   video I remember over hearing was on how to spot domestic terrorists.

Tyler Durden

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Re: FM 3-39-40
« Reply #2 on: May 09, 2012, 12:31:44 PM »
oh... Boy... After looking at this next pic i think i am going to need thicker foil for my hat:


jnevis

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Re: FM 3-39-40
« Reply #3 on: May 09, 2012, 01:41:29 PM »
Hate to burst your buble but that is a fairly old manual.  First version is from 1976, revised in 1986.  If I look enough I'd even put money on everything being based on a manual from as far back as WW1 or later, since it's how MPs are supposed to handle POWs, US military prisoners, civilians displaced by fighting, and humanitarian assistance missions.

 PREFACE
 
PART ONE FUNDAMENTALS OF INTERNMENT/RESETTLEMENT OPERATIONS
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION
  Procedures
  Definitions
  Objectives
  Agencies
  Protection of Captives and Detainees
  Protection of Enemy Prisoners of War and Civilian Internees
  Protection of Refugees
 
Chapter 2 COMMANDER AND STAFF RESPONSIBILITIES
  Section I — Commanders
  Procedures
  Principles and Policies
  Security
  Section II — Staff Officers
  Adjutant General
  Finance Officer
  Civil-Military Operations Officer
  Chaplain
  Engineer Officer
  Public Affairs Officer
  Signal Officer
  Staff Judge Advocate
  Medical Operations
  Movement Control Officer
  Inspector General
  Psychological Operations
  Section III — Training
 
PART TWO ENEMY PRISONERS OF WAR AND CIVILIAN INTERNEES
Chapter 3 DIVISION COLLECTING POINTS AND CORPS HOLDING AREAS
  Overview
  Processing Captives
  Evacuating Captives
  Division Collecting Points
  Corps Holding Areas
  Collocated Screening Sites
  Collecting Points in Other Operations
 
Chapter 4 ENEMY PRISONERS OF WAR
  Evacuation
  Receiving and Processing Areas
  Assignment to Internment Facilities
  Control and Discipline
  Clothing
  Subsistence
  Medical and Sanitation Considerations
  Correspondence
  Canteens
  Social Programs
  Security
 
Chapter 5 CIVILIAN INTERNEES
  General Protection
  Administrative Responsibilities
  Principles and Policies
  Clothing
  Subsistence
  Receiving and Processing Areas
  Control and Discipline
  Internee Committee
  Correspondence
  Complaints and Requests
  Medical Treatment
  Sanitation
  Transfer
  Release
  Social Programs
  Employment
  Security
  Disturbances
  Facility Markings
 
Chapter 6 INTERNMENT/RESETTLEMENT FACILITIES
  Planning
  Security Requirements
  Layout
  Receiving and Processing Centers
  Medical and Sanitation Considerations
 
PART THREE UNITED STATES MILITARY PRISONERS
Chapter 7 ARMY CORRECTIONS SYSTEM
  Levels of Confinement
  Correctional Facilities
  Legal Rights and Requirements
  Segregation
  Custody and Control
  Correctional-Treatment Programs
  Employment and Education
  Recreation
  Compensation, Clemency, and Parole
  Correctional Staff
  Prisoner Services Branch
  Personal Property and Funds
  Mail and Correspondence
  Support Personnel
  Transfer and Disposition Procedures
  Logistics
  Medical and Dental Treatment
 
Chapter 8 BATTLEFIELD CONFINEMENT OF UNITED STATES MILITARY PRISONERS
  Planning
  Field Detention Facility
  Field Confinement Facility
  Transfer and Disposition of Prisoners
 
PART FOUR MILITARY POLICE SUPPORT TO CIVIL-MILITARY OPERATIONS
Chapter 9 POPULACE AND RESOURCE CONTROL
  Dislocated-Civilian Operations
  Planning Dislocated-Civilian Operations
  Military Police Support to Dislocated-Civilian Operations
 
Chapter 10 HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE AND EMERGENCY SERVICES
  Section I - Humanitarian Assistance
  Operational Environment
  Rules of Engagement
  Legal Considerations
  Military Police Support
  Section II - Emergency Services
  In Continental United States
  Outside Continental United States
 
Appendix A METRIC CONVERSIONS
Appendix B USE OF FORCE AND RIOT CONTROL MEASURES
  Use of Force
  Deadly Force
  Rules of Engagement
  Nonlethal Weapons
  Crowd Dynamics
  Riot Control Measures
  Riot Control Agents
  Positions
  Formations
Appendix C EQUIPMENT GUIDE
Appendix D MILITARY POLICE INTERNMENT/RESETTLEMENT UNITS

*This publication supersedes FM 19-40, 27 February 1976, and FM 19-60, 27 May 1986.



I guess you guys also believe that this is a "railway prison car" right?



  http://pimpinturtle.com/2008/02/01/fema-ordered-102000-boxcars-with-shackles.aspx


..in case any of you were wondering it's a triple level auto carrier for shipping vehicles from the factory to distributors.
When seconds mean the difference between life and death, the police will be minutes away.

You are either SOLVING the problem, or you ARE the problem.

tombogan03884

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Re: FM 3-39-40
« Reply #4 on: May 09, 2012, 01:41:32 PM »




Will you go quietly ?

Sponsor

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Re: FM 3-39-40
« Reply #5 on: Today at 04:39:49 PM »

twyacht

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Re: FM 3-39-40
« Reply #5 on: May 09, 2012, 04:07:57 PM »

Will you go quietly ?
[/quote]







Thomas Jefferson: The strongest reason for the people to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against the tyranny of government. That is why our masters in Washington are so anxious to disarm us. They are not afraid of criminals. They are afraid of a populace which cannot be subdued by tyrants."
Col. Jeff Cooper.

 

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