"The Big Thaw" - читать интересную книгу автора (Harstad Donald)GlossaryAG: Attorney General, either State or Federal ATF: Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, sometimes referred to as BATF, a bureau under the U.S. Department of the Treasury CIA: Central Intelligence Agency. An agency of the U.S. Government COMM: Police Radio call sign of the Communications Center in Nation County DCI: Division of Criminal Investigation. A Division of the Iowa Department of Public Safety DEA: Drug Enforcement Administration, an agency of the U.S. Government DIA: Defense Intelligence Agency, the Intelligence analysis section of the U.S. Department of Defense DNE: Division of Narcotics Enforcement, an agency of the State of Iowa, and an offshoot of DCI DNR: Department of Natural Resources, an agency of the State of Iowa FBI: Federal Bureau of Investigation, a bureau of the U.S. Department of Justice ISP: Iowa State Patrol, the uniformed division of the Department of Public Safety ME: Medical Examiner NASA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration NRO: National Reconnaissance Office NSA: National Security Agency SA: Special Agent, either of the Iowa DCI or the FBI SAC: Special Agent in Charge, either of the DCI or the FBI SO: Sheriff's Office The so-called "ten codes" were developed in the early days of police radio communications. Many times, in those days, the first part of a transmission would be lost due to equipment vagaries, while the length of the transmissions and their clarity was improved by assigning numbers to the most common messages. Therefore, the "10" was used to alert the listener that a message number was to follow. This system has remained in use, and seems likely to do so for the foreseeable future. 10-2 Good Signal, usually used to mean simply "good" 10-4 Acknowledged, frequently used to indicate agreement 10-5 Relay 10-6 Busy (as in doing cop work), often used as a "do not disturb" sign on the radio 10-7 Temporarily Out of Service (as in lunch) 10-8 Back in Service 10-9 Repeat 10-10 Fight 10-13 Weather and Road Conditions 10-16 Domestic Case 10-20 Location 10-21 Telephone, as in "ten-twenty-one the office" 10-22 Disregard 10-23 Arrived at Scene 10-24 Assignment Completed 10-25 Report in Person to Meet, usually used simply as "meet" 10-27 Operator's License Information 10-28 Vehicle Registration Information 10-29 Check Records for Stolen, modern usage also means "warrant" or "wanted" 10-32 Suspect with Gun, also used in reference to knives and other devices 10-33 Emergency 10-46 Disabled Vehicle 10-50 Motor Vehicle Crash 10-51 Wrecker 10-52 Ambulance 10-55 DWI 10-56 Intoxicated Pedestrian 10-61 Personnel in Area, frequently used to indicate that a civilian can hear the radio 10-70 Fire 10-76 En Route 10-78 Need Assistance 10-79 Notify Medical Examiner, also used to indicate a deceased subject 10-80 High-Speed Pursuit 10-96 Mentally Disturbed Subject As an example, if you as an officer were to suddenly encounter an armed suspect, shots were fired, you needed help, and thought somebody had been injured, you might transmit: "ten-thirty-three, ten-thirty-two, need ten-seventy-eight, and get me a ten-fifty-two, this is ten-thirty-three!" (Note the use of 10-33 twice, which officers tend to do when emphasizing dire straits.) An excellent dispatcher will get the whole picture, and may merely try to discover your position by saying "ten-four, ten-twenty?" As with any system, the clarity and usefulness depends entirely on the quality of the personnel involved. An excited officer may be merely garbled, and the transmissions result in a "ten-nine?" An inattentive dispatcher may "tune in" halfway through the message, and receive incomplete data. This, too, can lead to additional risk and hazard. This is only one example of why the retention of your top-notch people is so important. |
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