that's funny, I have a plaque sitting right here signed by the AG thanking me for the 24 years of dedicated public service I gave to the DOJ. And MY SERVICE is far more relevant to CIVILIAN issues than your claims of being a guy operating a front end loader for the construction battalion.
I don't know, those loaders can be quite dangerous if one falls off of one and hitting a large rock with one can scare the heck out of the operator, not to mention the smell of diesel exhaust. It's a tough job and not one for a light hearted person.
No clueless and a clear sign you where never a LEO. It should be 3 Juliet 34, that would be the correct phonetic abbreviation for the U.S., in which case it would be District 3, Juvenile division unit 34. Thanks again for clarification of yet another false claim.
Oh my god that is hilarious. You actually don't know that some police departments do not use the military alphabet to describe sectors? How about you man up and make a bet with me right now that lvmpd does its calls signs this way? I am guaranteed a win so we can make very nice stakes. Are you man enough? Lol
ALPHA - 6pm-6am (11pm-7am for cities that are NOT on the new 12-hour shift schedule) BRAVO - 6am-6pm (7am-3pm for cities that are NOT on the new 12-hour shift schedule) CHARLIE - 3pm-11pm (for cities that are NOT on the new 12-hour shift schedule) BAKER - Baker Act Unit DELTA - Sergeants ECHO - Lieutenants FOXTROT - Foot/Bicycle Patrol GOLF - School Police Officers HOTEL - Jail/Prisoner Transport INDIA - Airport/HQ Comms JULIET - Juvenile Crime Detectives K-9 - Dog/K9 Unit KILO - Street Crimes Detectives NOVEMBER - Special Victims Unit/Sex Crimes OSCAR - Marine Units PAPA - Aviation Unit/Sheriff's Helicopter QUEBEC - State/District Attorney SIERRA - Sheriff/UnderSheriff TANGO - Traffic Unit/Aggressive Driving Enforcement Unit/DUI Task Force UNIFORM - Off Duty/Special Detail Unit VICTOR - Vice Squad/Organized Crime Unit/OCB WHISKEY - Civil Employee/Non-Police X-RAY - Communications/Dispatch Sub-Station Annex YANKEE - Narcotics Detectives ZULU - Community Service Aide/Public Safety Aide/Accident Investigator/Non-Armed
Exactly rich. The first number is the shift you work. The second is the area and the Last two are zones in that area. 1 Adam 12 is day shift Adam area zones one and two
The fact that anyone thinks there is one code used by every police department shows they were never a cop.
Sorry once again incorrect, in the 90's APCO unified the phonetic alphabet to standardize communications across departments to reduce miscommunications when working multijurisdictional operations. Your reply also this points out that you don't understand military communications as well, in 1956 the ICAO-ITU adopted the same phonetics as I already posted, the U.S. military adopted the same on March 1, 1956 and has been the standard for the U.S. and NATO ever since. Oh by the way as for your bet you will lose, the LVMPD doesn't use numbers for their districts, the use alpha identifiers, as such there is no such thing as a District 3 within the LVMPD jurisdiction. More falsehoods.
Then take the bet. Those are area commands. Within each area command there are sectors and then zones. Just bet me. Man up
BTW it's not Mary it's Mike. The NATO phonetic spelling alphabet was first adopted on January 1, 1956, while the ICAO radiotelephony spelling alphabet was still undergoing final changes.[4] NATO March 1, 1956 – present[9] A Alfa B Bravo C Charlie D Delta E Echo F Foxtrot G Golf H Hotel I India J Juliet K Kilo L Lima M Mike N November O Oscar P Papa Q Quebec R Romeo S Sierra T Tango U Uniform V Victor W Whiskey X X-ray Y Yankee Z Zulu
Nope incorrect, that information is from the LVMPD. You were never a LEO and do not understand military communications.
Again totally false, I never made such a statement. Keep on digging and let me get you another shovel.