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Indianapolis Signal 51 = Running Radar
Elkhart County Signal 51 = Homicide
Just an example of how they can differ vastly from area to area.Leave a comment:
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To answer the original question:
http://www.spookyblue.com/police-scanner/10code.htm seems pretty accurate, and kind of funny in the way they are described.
Yes, they are pretty standard in Indiana. This is NOT true in some other states, Kentucky for example, where a city PD may have different codes than their county SD uses. Indiana codes and, say Louisville codes, are also completely different.
Indianapolis (and Lousville, for that matter) are technically plain speech departments, but several common 10 codes are still in use, 10-27, 10-28, etc.
Our coroner is their plane crash, for example. Several of the common ones are the same, which only makes the differences more confusing. That's why the Feds encourage plain speech between agencies. You don't want a vending machine vandal being described as a person who shot at police because 10 codes don't match up.
And if you don't think the thugs know what 10-99 means I hope you brought your running shoes...Leave a comment:
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Seems easier to me to just give it to them. "XX-XX, Jones has Operators..."Leave a comment:
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Lol thats a mouth full. I have to agree that its just easier to say that you're on your way back to HQ with a prisoner and need a breathalyzer. 10-codes are a little more fun though.
I was sitting in the dispatching office in Brown County, I got a kick out of it when one of the dispatchers said ".....10-36 22:36". Im easily amused I guess.
Another thing I noticed and found a little odd, is that when an officer would call in for a 10-27, the dispatcher would say "your results on your 10-27 are..." I figured there was a 10-code for the results.Leave a comment:
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To answer the original question:
http://www.spookyblue.com/police-scanner/10code.htm seems pretty accurate, and kind of funny in the way they are described.
Yes, they are pretty standard in Indiana. This is NOT true in some other states, Kentucky for example, where a city PD may have different codes than their county SD uses. Indiana codes and, say Louisville codes, are also completely different.
Indianapolis (and Lousville, for that matter) are technically plain speech departments, but several common 10 codes are still in use, 10-27, 10-28, etc.
Our coroner is their plane crash, for example. Several of the common ones are the same, which only makes the differences more confusing. That's why the Feds encourage plain speech between agencies. You don't want a vending machine vandal being described as a person who shot at police because 10 codes don't match up.
And if you don't think the thugs know what 10-99 means I hope you brought your running shoes...Leave a comment:
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Guest repliedLol thats a mouth full. I have to agree that its just easier to say that you're on your way back to HQ with a prisoner and need a breathalyzer. 10-codes are a little more fun though.
I was sitting in the dispatching office in Brown County, I got a kick out of it when one of the dispatchers said ".....10-36 22:36". Im easily amused I guess.
Another thing I noticed and found a little odd, is that when an officer would call in for a 10-27, the dispatcher would say "your results on your 10-27 are..." I figured there was a 10-code for the results.Leave a comment:
-
Lol thats a mouth full. I have to agree that its just easier to say that you're on your way back to HQ with a prisoner and need a breathalyzer. 10-codes are a little more fun though.
I was sitting in the dispatching office in Brown County, I got a kick out of it when one of the dispatchers said ".....10-36 22:36". Im easily amused I guess.
Another thing I noticed and found a little odd, is that when an officer would call in for a 10-27, the dispatcher would say "your results on your 10-27 are..." I figured there was a 10-code for the results.Leave a comment:
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