Skip to Content

County suspends ECV to bag bad guys

County suspends ECV to bag bad guys

TACOMA, Wash.--In what SIAC director Ron Walters called a “great example of cooperation between law enforcement and our industry,” a Washington sheriff's department suspended the county's false alarm fines and enhanced call verification requirements to catch a group of five suspected burglars. The temporary suspension of procedure worked.

Suspension of ECV and fines, “and sometimes all calls,” is something that “occurs a couple times a year,” Walters said. SIAC and others actively encourage police departments “to interface with the alarm industry when there's a specific problem in an area [such as the situation in Tacoma],” Walters said.

In March and April, the Pierce County Sheriff's Department appealed to the Washington Burglar and Fire Alarm Association to ask its members to temporarily modify alarm dispatch procedures to assist in the Sheriff's attempts to capture a group of individuals believed to be responsible for a series of connected burglaries. The Sheriff's Department asked alarm companies in a designated area, where the break-ins were occurring, to dispatch immediately and suspend the usual two-call verification until after dispatch. The Sheriff also suspended false alarm fines to the amended area during the amendment period.

The procedural change paid off, and the Washington Burglar & Fire Alarm Association in an April 27 letter passed along thanks from the Sheriff's Department. “The Pierce County Sheriff's Office would like to thank everyone for this cooperative effort. Five suspects have been identified, three of whom are in jail.”

Pierce County has since returned to usual false alarm ordinance protocols of ECV and fines.

Comments

To comment on this post, please log in to your account or set up an account now.