EMERGENCY ACTION PLAN

[VENUE/DETAIL REFERENCE - ENGAGEMENT REF]

The Emergency Action Plan is an operational crisis playbook, not an intelligence assessment. It is written to be executed under duress: immediate-action drills first, reference material second. All engagement-specific, venue-specific, or principal-specific values must be recorded as bracketed placeholders (e.g. [VENUE], [HOSPITAL], [YYYY-MM-DD]). Do not assert fictional findings or invent data.


Document Control

FieldValue
Report Reference[REF-YYYY-###]
Date of Report[YYYY-MM-DD]
Reporting Period / As-Of Date[YYYY-MM-DD]
Classification / Handling[internal / CONFIDENTIAL - CLIENT EYES ONLY]
Client[CLIENT NAME]
Requesting Party[REQUESTER NAME / ID]
Prepared By[ANALYST NAME / ID]
Reviewed By[REVIEWER NAME / ID]
Approving Officer[APPROVER NAME / ID]
Version[0.1.0]
Distribution[NAMED RECIPIENTS]

Handling: [internal / CONFIDENTIAL]. Disseminate only to active detail operators and named responders. May contain personal medical data on the principal: store and transmit per the data-processing agreement.

Nature of this product: This is an operational emergency plan. It does not deliver legal or medical advice and does not guarantee prevention of any incident. All force renders to lawful effects per DOCTRINE.md.

Sourcing & verification: Emergency numbers, trauma centers, and responder contacts are pulled from the corresponding ART-region-package and verified at the dates recorded in the Emergency Directory (Annex A).

Subject / Engagement Snapshot

FieldValue
EAP Reference[ ]
Area of Operations[REGION PACKAGE / RGN-###]
Primary Safe Haven[ ]
Primary Trauma Center[HOSPITAL / drive time]
Verification Date[YYYY-MM-DD]

Table of Contents

  1. Activation and Scope
  2. Emergency Contact Roster
  3. Command, Authority, and Succession
  4. Immediate Action Drills
  5. Safe Havens and Rally Points
  6. Evacuation and Exfiltration Plan
  7. Medical Plan
  8. Communications and Duress
  9. Reconstitution and Accountability
  10. Maintenance and Rehearsal
  11. Annex A: Emergency Directory (graded)
  12. Annex B: Grading Matrices

1. Activation and Scope

Instructional tradecraft: State who may declare an emergency, how activation is announced, and the boundary between this plan and the standing post orders.

  • Declaration: Any operator may declare an emergency on the Detail Net. The declaration format is the emergency type plus location: for example, “MEDICAL, lobby” or “CONTACT, north gate.”
  • Effect of Activation: On declaration, the detail executes the matching Immediate Action Drill (Section 4). The Detail Leader assumes incident command (Section 3) and the notification cascade (Section 8) begins.
  • Scope Boundary: Standing post duties are in EP-009 Post Orders; EP-009 immediate-action cards summarize the first steps and point here for the full response. This plan governs from declaration through reconstitution.
  • Mandatory Follow-On: Any activation of this plan triggers an After-Action Report per EP-017.

2. Emergency Contact Roster

Instructional tradecraft: Populate from the region package emergency-services annex and verify every number at the advance. Keep this section on the first page of any printed copy.

RoleContactVerifiedNotes
Local Emergency (LE / EMS / Fire)[LOCAL EMERGENCY NUMBER][YYYY-MM-DD]From region package Annex B
Primary Trauma Center[HOSPITAL / NUMBER][YYYY-MM-DD]Region package Annex C
Secondary / Burn Center[HOSPITAL / NUMBER][YYYY-MM-DD]If distinct from primary
Poison Control[NUMBER][YYYY-MM-DD]
LE Liaison / Precinct[NUMBER / CONTACT][YYYY-MM-DD]Region package Annex D
C2 Post[NUMBER / NET][YYYY-MM-DD]
Detail Leader[NUMBER / ID][YYYY-MM-DD]Incident command
Team Leader[NUMBER / ID][YYYY-MM-DD]
Client Emergency Contact[NUMBER / ID][YYYY-MM-DD]Next-of-kin / authority per client agreement
Embassy / Consulate (if abroad)[NUMBER][YYYY-MM-DD]

3. Command, Authority, and Succession

Instructional tradecraft: Fix who commands an incident and who inherits command if that person is the casualty.

  • Incident Command: The Detail Leader commands any active incident and is the sole authority to order evacuation or exfiltration.
  • Succession: If the Detail Leader is unreachable or is the casualty, command passes to [DESIGNATED DEPUTY ROLE], then to the senior operator on the Detail Net.
  • Principal Handling Authority: Movement of the principal is directed by the operator in physical contact (the PPO) until the Detail Leader assumes control; life-safety action never waits for authorization.

4. Immediate Action Drills

Instructional tradecraft: Each drill is a quick card. Read the trigger, execute the first actions in order, then transition. Do not narrate; act, then report. Actions render to lawful effects only.

4.1 Attack on Principal / Active Assailant

  • Trigger: Weapon displayed, shots fired, or a direct assault on the principal.
  • Immediate actions: (1) Sound the alarm (“CONTACT” plus direction). (2) Cover and evacuate: the PPO bodies the principal away from the threat toward the nearest hard cover or safe haven. (3) Draw fire away from the principal only as a lawful last resort in defense of life. (4) Do not close with the threat; the mission is to remove the principal, not to engage.
  • Then: Move to the primary safe haven or vehicle (Section 5/6); account for the principal; notify C2 and LE; execute EP-017.

4.2 Medical Emergency / Trauma

  • Trigger: Principal or team member is injured or acutely ill.
  • Immediate actions: (1) Ensure scene safety before rendering aid. (2) Apply life-saving intervention within training (catastrophic bleeding, airway, breathing). (3) Call [LOCAL EMERGENCY NUMBER] and C2. (4) Retrieve the medical kit (Section 7). (5) Reference the principal medical annex (EP-001 Section 5) for blood type, allergies, and medications.
  • Then: Decide transport vs. wait-for-EMS (Section 7); guide EMS to the entry point; notify the client emergency contact; execute EP-017.

4.3 Fire / Smoke

  • Trigger: Fire, smoke, or a fire alarm at the principal’s location.
  • Immediate actions: (1) Move the principal toward the nearest clear exit and away from smoke. (2) Sound the alarm; notify C2. (3) Do not use elevators. (4) If egress is blocked, move to a defensible room with an exterior window and signal.
  • Then: Muster at the primary rally point (Section 5); headcount; call fire services; execute EP-017.

4.4 Suspicious Device / IED

  • Trigger: Unattended package, wire, or device indicators near the principal.
  • Immediate actions: (1) Do not touch, move, or transmit on radio or cellular within [N] meters of the device. (2) Move the principal away by the largest available distance using cover. (3) Clear and cordon; deny access. (4) Notify LE and C2 from a safe distance.
  • Then: Relocate to the alternate safe haven; await disposal clearance; execute EP-017.

4.5 Vehicle Attack / Hostile Vehicle

  • Trigger: A vehicle used as a weapon, a ramming attempt, or an illegal checkpoint.
  • Immediate actions: (1) In a vehicle: driver executes the pre-briefed evasive drill and does not stop for an unauthorized checkpoint. (2) On foot: move perpendicular to the vehicle’s path behind hard cover (bollard, wall, heavy vehicle). (3) Notify C2 and LE.
  • Then: Break contact toward the safe haven or exfiltration route (Section 6); execute EP-017.

4.6 Hostile Surveillance / Abduction Attempt

  • Trigger: Confirmed hostile surveillance (link to EP-008) or an attempted seizure of the principal.
  • Immediate actions: (1) Declare and break contact. (2) Do not comply with movement demands; keep the principal with the detail. (3) Move to a public, populated, hardened location. (4) Notify C2 and LE.
  • Then: Execute exfiltration (Section 6); if a team member is taken, LE assumes primacy; execute EP-017.

4.7 Shelter-in-Place

  • Trigger: External threat makes movement more dangerous than staying (active event outside, civil disturbance, environmental hazard).
  • Immediate actions: (1) Move the principal to the designated shelter room or safe haven. (2) Lock and barricade; kill exterior-facing lights as appropriate. (3) Account for all personnel; maintain comms with C2.
  • Then: Hold until the Detail Leader or LE clears movement; ready an exfiltration option (Section 6).

5. Safe Havens and Rally Points

Instructional tradecraft: A safe haven is a defensible location with comms, an exit, and ideally medical proximity. Pre-identify and pre-walk each one at the advance (EP-002).

LocationTypeAddress / ReferenceAttributesNotes
[SH-1]Primary safe haven[ADDRESS / ROOM][hardened, comms, exit, medical proximity]
[SH-2]Alternate safe haven[ADDRESS / ROOM][ ]
[RP-1]Primary rally point[LOCATION][outside the structure, accountable]For fire/evacuation muster
[RP-2]Alternate rally point[LOCATION][ ]

6. Evacuation and Exfiltration Plan

Instructional tradecraft: Distinguish evacuation (leave this structure) from exfiltration (leave this Area of Operations). Give routes, modes, and destinations, with a primary and an alternate for each.

  • Evacuation Routes: Primary [ROUTE] and alternate [ROUTE] from the principal’s location to the vehicle or rally point. Pre-walked and validated at the advance.
  • Exfiltration Modes: Ground primary via [ROUTE to destination]; ground alternate via [ROUTE]; air/rail contingency via [OPTION]. Reference the region package transport annex for cordon and closure constraints.
  • Destinations: Nearest safe city or support base [DESTINATION] with pre-positioned support at [CONTACT]. Trauma routing overrides all other destinations for a medical exfiltration.
  • Vehicle Staging: Vehicles staged at [LOCATION] with engines ready during elevated posture; a warm vehicle is maintained within [N] minutes of the principal.

7. Medical Plan

Instructional tradecraft: The medical plan is decided at the advance, not during the emergency. Fix the hospital, the route, the kit, and the transport decision rule.

  • Primary Trauma Center: [HOSPITAL] via [ROUTE], estimated [N] minutes; from the region package medical annex.
  • Secondary / Specialty: [HOSPITAL] (burn or cardiac if indicated).
  • Casualty Categories and Transport Rule: Life-threatening casualty moves by the fastest means, which is the detail vehicle when EMS exceeds [N] minutes; stable casualty waits for EMS. The Detail Leader makes the transport decision.
  • Medical Kits: Primary trauma kit carried by the PPO; secondary kit in the [lead / follow] vehicle. Inventory and expiry checked at T-24h.
  • Principal Medical Data: Blood type, allergies, medications, and consent status are held in the principal profile (EP-001 Section 5); do not restate here.

8. Communications and Duress

Instructional tradecraft: State the emergency net, the notification cascade, and the duress signals. Net architecture and PACE live in EP-011.

  • Emergency Net: Declarations and incident traffic run on the Detail Net per EP-011; on failure, revert to the next PACE step.
  • Notification Cascade: On-scene operator to Detail Leader to Team Leader to LE and client emergency contact. Skip echelons only for immediate life-safety, then back-brief.
  • Duress Signals: Verbal duress [VERBAL SIGNAL] and digital duress [HARD-KEY TRIGGER] per EP-011; a duress signal is treated as a confirmed emergency until proven otherwise.
  • Challenge / Response: Challenge [CHALLENGE-WORD], response [RESPONSE-WORD] for verifying identity during an active incident.

9. Reconstitution and Accountability

Instructional tradecraft: The emergency is not over until every person is accounted for and the picture is stable.

  • Accountability: Conduct a headcount of the principal and all operators at the rally point or safe haven immediately after any drill.
  • Status Report: The Detail Leader reports personnel, principal, and threat status to C2 and the Team Leader.
  • Stand-Down: Only the Team Leader (or the Detail Leader in their absence) declares the emergency concluded and sets the resumed posture.
  • After-Action: Initiate EP-017 within the mandated window; preserve logs, imagery, and any evidence for LE handoff.

10. Maintenance and Rehearsal

Instructional tradecraft: An unrehearsed EAP fails on contact.

  • Rehearsal: Walk and talk-through every drill at the advance and brief-back before the first principal movement.
  • Verification Cadence: Re-verify all Annex A contacts and the primary hospital status at [cadence, e.g. each phase change or every 72h].
  • Update Triggers: Change of venue or lodging, change in the region package, a new threat indicator, or any activation of this plan.
  • Owner: Detail Leader compiles; Team Leader approves.

Annex A: Emergency Directory (graded)

Grade each responder contact with the Admiralty two-axis code and record the verification date. An ungraded emergency contact is treated as unverified.

Contact / SourceAdmiralty GradeDate VerifiedRelevance
[Local emergency dispatch][A-F/1-6][YYYY-MM-DD]Primary response
[Primary trauma center][A-F/1-6][YYYY-MM-DD]Casualty routing
[LE liaison][A-F/1-6][YYYY-MM-DD]Coordination

Annex B: Grading Matrices

NATO Admiralty source reliability (A-F): A Completely reliable · B Usually reliable · C Fairly reliable · D Not usually reliable · E Unreliable · F Reliability cannot be judged.

NATO Admiralty information credibility (1-6): 1 Confirmed by other sources · 2 Probably true · 3 Possibly true · 4 Doubtful · 5 Improbable · 6 Truth cannot be judged.

Risk scoring key: Likelihood (1-5) × Impact (1-5) = 1-25; 1-5 Low · 6-10 Moderate · 11-15 Elevated · 16-20 High · 21-25 Critical.

END OF REPORT

Model wiring

Generated from cell frontmatter at publish time.