bababouy
Known around here
We get this guy walking around and going through some of the commercial trucks.
We see a pretty good response time across the country with departments. The difference when we call it in is, we are reporting a live event and we are able to give real time info to the dispatcher. With a burglar alarm or video verified alarm call, most departments see them as being false most of the time. 4-8 minutes seems to be the average time for officers to respond. Don't use our video for reference because most of the time officers arrive in the area and set up a perimeter first. Our cameras don't usually capture this, but the dispatcher will let us know that an officer or several officers are in the area.I am pretty impressed with your local Law Enforcement with their response to basically just a 'suspicious person' call.
Our dispatch center has a “non-emergency” number too that I save in my phone. Calling 911 is good if you are in the location of the incident.. dispatchers get more info from your phone (location, number, provider etc) if you call 911 vs a standard number. Otherwise non-emergency is fine. In our county the same dispatchers answer the phone no matter what number you call. They just put you on hold if something more important is coming in. If you call 911 out-state just specify right away what county/state you need and they will transfer you.I would think that one main difference is you must have a good number to call the police. The average Joe has to call 911. Ever try to look up the emergency report number to your local police dept? There is only a general operator number for any type of call (non-emergency). I worry about this if I get a push notification for an alarm while out of state. If you call 911 for an out of state break in they will probably say WTF? I keep the general phone number to my local Sheriff Dept for that purpose. Anyone else solve this problem?