Stats for Part I offenses are based on incidents reported to the police, not arrests made by the police. These offenses include homicide, aggravated assault, robbery, burglary, rape, theft, etc. This is how cities…
> But they did release the incident report, presumably as a pretense of transparency and/or good will. No argument here; either release useful information or don’t. > Your argument here is basically, "Oh don't worry,…
The nearly blank narrative is listed under the header “public narrative”. Many departments use this to separate out the actual narrative from what can be immediately provided to the public (often just a sentence or…
This is sensationalist nonsense. The narrative is mostly blank because the media probably couldn’t get the full narrative as it’s an ongoing investigation and thus not subject to open records. It looks like they only…
Stats for Part I offenses are based on incidents reported to the police, not arrests made by the police. These offenses include homicide, aggravated assault, robbery, burglary, rape, theft, etc. This is how cities…
> But they did release the incident report, presumably as a pretense of transparency and/or good will. No argument here; either release useful information or don’t. > Your argument here is basically, "Oh don't worry,…
The nearly blank narrative is listed under the header “public narrative”. Many departments use this to separate out the actual narrative from what can be immediately provided to the public (often just a sentence or…
This is sensationalist nonsense. The narrative is mostly blank because the media probably couldn’t get the full narrative as it’s an ongoing investigation and thus not subject to open records. It looks like they only…