Edmonton Cops Refuse Response to 911 Calls-News Like Mexico,Jamaica,KGB
Edmonton Cops Refuse Response to 911 Calls
After media publicity, the cops apolohized, claiming thhhhhhhere were no cops available. Some reasons for no real cops available, due to massive wastage of millions by EPS. $1,500,000 for 14 person BS/PR staff, instead of using funds to hire 30 to 50 rookie cops to do real police work More millions wste when useless cops demolish hundreds of police cars while NOT on police calls More millions wasted on useless copper chopper,unable to actuakky prove any use More money wasted buying sefways for lazy cops More money wasted on bar/lounge in police HQ soo cops can drive drunk after shifts Millions waasted defending and paying for criminl cops Just a few examples of cops screwing taxpayers EPS refused to respond to repeated emergency calls from whites, but wasted half the police force in connection with prominent ZYD jewellery store owner Davidoff. Edmonton fitness instructor slams police for slow response time By Matt Dykstra ,Edmonton Sun First posted: Wednesday, July 24, 2013 08:11 PM MDT | Updated: Thursday, July 25, 2013 07:22 AM MDT Millbourne Insp. Blair Edl, right, and Sgt. Rayanne Knox comment on a complaint received by the Edmonton Police Service regarding police response to an intoxicated persons call at the North Millbourne Community League on Monday morning in Edmonton, Alta., on Wednesday, July 24, 2013. Codie McLachlan/Edmonton Sun/QMI Agency Article Claiming the 911 emergency system failed her, a local fitness instructor has filed a formal complaint with the Edmonton Police Service after two men barricaded her and seven others inside a southeast community league building. Cheryl Schneider was hosting a spin class in the basement of the North Millbourne Community League at 6 a.m. Monday morning when two “drunk and strung-out” men and their pug walked in uninvited. The men were escorted back upstairs by the lone man in the class, said Schneider, but as the doors locked behind them, the men became angry and started trying to break down the door to get back inside. She says it took four 911 calls and more than an hour for police to arrive and, by then, the suspects fled. They have not been found. “When you have two angry, drunk, young men trying to break into your building, we should have a better response time than that,” said Schneider. She watched the men tried repeatedly to get inside, even trying to smash in the building’s lock box for a key and attempting to bash down the door with a two-by-eight board of wood. When that didn’t work, Schneider said the men then used to board to barricade the door before leaving. While the class got the door open, it was a full thirty minutes before police arrived at approximately 7:30 a.m., she said. “We were frightened and just so disheartened that the police hadn’t come at that point,” she said. “It was a tense situation because they were drunk and unpredictable... I don’t know what would have happened if they got inside.” Police officials are reviewing how the call was prioritized and dispatched. All four of her 911 calls were reviewed by the superintendent in charge of the EPS operational support division by Wednesday afternoon, said Sgt. Rayanne Knox, in charge of quality assurance for the police call centre. Knox said police empathize with Schneider but said “the call was evaluated and dispatched properly based on the information we had at the time.” Insp. Blair Edl, in charge of the police communications, said police responded to the non-emergency call “as quickly as we possibly could have.” “Had the call escalated to where the person had safety issues or there was a crime in progress, the priority would have been raised and we would have attempted to respond sooner,” he said. Edl said several factors slowed the police response. Officers were in the middle of a shift change and were dealing with an ongoing homicide investigation and a suicidal man, he said. The dispatcher “did it right” by sending an officer who started at 7 a.m., said Edl, adding the total response time from the first call was approximately 48 minutes. Edl said the review results are expected within 30 days. In the meantime, Schneider says the league president has offered to hire a security guard. The 45-year-old mother of three says she’s not nervous about the location, but is more scared Edmonton’s 911 system is inadequate. “I can’t live with a system that’s so flawed it allows a few incidents to cut away the need of the public,” she said. “I’ve always told my children that if they’re in a bad situation to call 911 because the good guys will come. What do I say to them now? Hopefully your timing is good?” @SunMattDykstra Time for residents to arm themselves and get rid of criminals, as the guy with the machete did with burglar. Crooked EPS are useless and should be fired. |
Edmonton Cops Refuse Response to Grosvomit's 911 Calls-News Like Mexico,Jamaica,KGB
AvoidDeadmonton wrote in
: FOAD, William "Humpboys" Grosvenor. -- http://alturl.com/mciyq My Ugly Self http://alturl.com/szzfp My Court Shellacking http://alturl.com/w7pww My Shameful Legal History My Name is William Grosvenor Certified General Asshole |
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