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In this episode of the Blue Line Project, we move beyond the individual officer and focus on the role supervisors play in shaping use-of-force outcomes. Force science shows us that under stress, perception narrows, time compresses, and distance closes. But what often goes unexamined is how leadership influences those conditions before force ever occurs. Supervisors control pace, containment, tone, and expectations on scene. They decide whether time is protected or pressured. This episode explores how procedural justice applies not only to community interactions, but inside the agency itself. Internal legitimacy shapes external legitimacy. When officers feel supported, heard, and treated fairly, they make better decisions under stress. When leadership rewards judgment, patience, and containment, force becomes less frequent. Drawing on field experience and grounded in Sir Robert Peel’s principles, this discussion reframes supervision as a critical force multiplier. Reducing unnecessary force is not about weakening officers — it is about strengthening leadership, protecting time and distance, and reinforcing a culture where sound decision-making is the standard. The moment before force belongs to leadership. Links to research: Evidence Based Policing Matrix: https://cebcp.org/evidence-based-poli... Effects of Supervisor Style (Engel) https://nij.ojp.gov/library/publicati... Can you Build Better Cops (Owens, 2018) https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/1... The Effects of a Supervisor's Better Training (Lim): https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/1...