What is the TacMed ARK NYPD Counterterrorism Kit and who is it designed for?
The TacMed™ Active Shooter Response Kit (ARK) configured to NYPD Counterterrorism Unit specifications is a 9.5 lb agency-grade mass casualty trauma system designed for law enforcement, security, and tactical teams who may face active shooter or terrorist incidents with multiple simultaneous casualties. It was developed in direct collaboration with law enforcement and military special operations units and reflects the real-world operational requirements established through after-action review by the NYPD Counterterrorism Unit. The system is designed to be deployed by a single officer, medic, or building security team to initiate hemorrhage control on up to seven simultaneous casualties.
What is a Casualty Throw Kit and how does it work?
Each of the seven ARK Casualty Throw Kits is an individually packaged, self-contained mini-kit that includes a SOF® Tourniquet, QuikClot® Combat Gauze LE, compressed gauze, a BIC marker for tourniquet time documentation, a casualty location marker, a TacMed Combat Casualty Tag for TCCC triage documentation, and a pair of Defender gloves. The throw kit is designed to be tossed to — or placed with — a downed casualty by a responder without stopping movement. Each kit includes bi-lingual written instructions so that untrained bystanders can initiate tourniquet application and hemorrhage control on the casualty without direct medical supervision, effectively multiplying the treatment capacity of a single trained responder.
How many tourniquets does the ARK NYPD CT Kit contain in total?
The ARK-NYPDCT deploys 11 SOF® Tourniquets in total — four in the main operator bag and one in each of the seven Casualty Throw Kits. This provides sufficient tourniquet capacity for seven individual casualties with tourniquet-treatable extremity hemorrhage, all from a single bag. The SOF® Tourniquet is the preferred tourniquet of 7 of the 10 largest U.S. police departments and is ANSI-compliant at 100%, with an aluminum windlass rod and wide-band design that reduces pressure per unit area on the limb compared to narrow-band designs.
What advanced supplies does the main ARK bag contain for trained responders?
The main bag carries four additional SOF® Tourniquets, two OLAES® Modular Bandages in 4" configuration, two OLAES® Modular Bandages in 6" configuration, one BLAST® Bandage for complex abdominal and junctional wound management, two rolls of QuikClot® Combat Gauze LE for junctional and truncal hemorrhage, two petrolatum gauze pads for wound sealing and burn protection, two rolls of 2" surgical tape, two sets of NAR Trauma Shears (7.25"), and five pairs of Defender gloves for multiple providers. The bag measures 23" × 15" × 7.5" with multiple compartment zones that keep the throw kits separate from advanced operator supplies.
What clinical doctrine does the ARK's throw kit design implement?
The ARK's Throw Kit system directly implements the Hartford Consensus (2013) model and subsequent TECC guidelines, which formalized the role of Immediate Responders — untrained civilians and law enforcement — in hemorrhage control as a first-priority life-saving intervention. Studies in the Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery estimate that up to 50% of preventable trauma deaths in tactical settings involve extremity exsanguination treatable with early tourniquet application. By distributing self-contained throw kits with bilingual instructions, the ARK enables hemorrhage control to begin on downed casualties immediately — before trained EMS can access the scene in an active threat environment — consistent with the documented clinical reality that time to tourniquet is the decisive variable in survival from extremity hemorrhage.
Can untrained bystanders use the ARK Casualty Throw Kits?
Yes — each throw kit includes a bi-lingual instruction card with step-by-step tourniquet application guidance designed for use by minimally trained bystanders. This is the core Hartford Consensus design principle: a trained responder can hand or throw a kit to a downed casualty or nearby civilian and the kit enables correct hemorrhage control without direct supervision.
What is the difference between the NYPD CT configuration and the standard TacMed ARK?
The NYPD CT configuration specifies SOF® Tourniquet Wides in both the main bag and throw kits, QuikClot® Combat Gauze LE as the hemostatic agent (vs. plain gauze in some variants), BLAST® bandage for junctional wounds, and TacMed Combat Casualty Tags for TCCC triage documentation. The NYPD Counterterrorism Unit reviewed and approved this specific loadout following after-action analysis of active-shooter and bombing incidents.
How should the ARK be staged for deployment in a law enforcement context?
TacMed and TECC doctrine recommend staging the ARK in the lead patrol vehicle or at the sector staging point. During an active-shooter event, the responding officer or medic carries the bag to the first available casualty collection point, distributes throw kits to ambulatory casualties or bystanders who are with downed individuals, and retains the main bag for advanced care. Pre-mission briefing on throw-kit distribution is essential to realize the kit's multi-casualty capacity.
Is the ARK compliant with CoTCCC recommendations?
The ARK's core hemorrhage-control components are CoTCCC-recommended or CoTCCC-preferred: the SOF® Tourniquet is a CoTCCC-approved windlass device, and QuikClot® Combat Gauze LE is on the CoTCCC preferred hemostatic gauze list. The overall system design reflects the Hartford Consensus Immediate Responder model developed from CoTCCC-based TECC protocols.