[Scan-DC] Alexandria Police to Scanner Listeners: Drop Dead

cohenner at gmail.com cohenner at gmail.com
Fri Sep 3 08:39:09 EDT 2010


Unfortunately for Alexandria, we have not gotten to the point where PUBLIC radio frequencies are prohibited from being monitored. Is this guy really concerned with people listening to calls for parked cars in front of fire hydrants? Sounds like they have nothing better to do with their time. 

So, my reply to this clown is:

1. You want to prohibit the public from listening to calls? Spend the money to upgrade your infrastructure so that people can't listen in, instead of complaining. 

2. Just because you caught one guy with a scanner app, doesn't mean we are all bad. I, in fact, use my app for work!

3.  If he considers barking dogs and illegally parked cars officer safety issues, he's got much more to worry about. 

My take. This article kind of angered me...

David
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T

-----Original Message-----
From: "Blair Thompson" <b_thom at juno.com>
Sender: scan-dc-bounces at mailman.qth.net
Date: Fri, 3 Sep 2010 12:25:26 
To: <Scan-DC at mailman.qth.net>; <b_thom at rocketmail.com>
Subject: [Scan-DC] Alexandria Police to Scanner Listeners: Drop Dead

http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/article.asp?article=343862&paper=59&cat=104

Silence of the Scanners

Alexandria police consider proposal to prevent public access to its scanner radio.

By Michael Lee Pope
Thursday, September 02, 2010  

For many people, listening to the actions of the Alexandria Police Department on a scanner radio is a way to know what’s happening in their city — everything from crime and fires to calls from people who are having trouble breathing. But police officials are concerned that the subculture of people who make a habit of listening to the police scanner has become too diverse, and that advances in technology have made it too easy for burglars to have a minute-by-minute account of what public-safety officials are up to through their iPhone.

"When we made an apprehension on one of these guys, we scrolled through the telephone and the last thing they had been monitoring was our police frequency," said Deputy Chief Eddie Reyes. "They are literally monitoring the police response as they are committing the act."
....

"At the end of the day, it’s a privilege not a right," said Reyes. "We’ve gotten to the point in the world where public safety and officer safety has to outweigh the privilege of being able to monitor barking dogs and cars parking by fire hydrants and things like that."
....

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