Buy guns. Buy ammo.
Civilization is crumbling before our very ideas. “Progressive” policies hurling us back to the stone age.
Democrats defunded the police therefore get less police. Keep voting Democrat.
Pittsburgh PD will stop sending officers to certain emergency calls from 3am – 7am, redirecting them to a “telephone unit”:
“Those calls will be queued up for the person that comes in at 7am to take the reports in the morning.”
Everything is fine! pic.twitter.com/VVvlp1f2dl
— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) March 10, 2024
Pittsburgh police will no longer respond to certain calls including theft, harassment, criminal mischief, and burglary alarms.
Between 3AM-7AM there will be no officers at any police stations.
Buy guns. Buy ammo.
The police will not protect you. pic.twitter.com/ZoQbkREQUs
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) March 10, 2024
Pittsburgh Police to stop responding to certain emergency calls
By: WHNZ
PITTSBURGH — Starting Monday, the city of Pittsburgh says it will no longer respond to 911 calls that are not related to “in progress emergencies.”
According to a press release titled “Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Makes Operational Changes to Better Serve Pittsburgh,” the city will create a “Telephone Reporting Unit” (TRU) to dispatch calls that do not require an in-person response by officers.
“TRU will NOT be assigned to any ‘In Progress’ call where a suspect may be on scene, any crime where a person may need medical aid, any domestic dispute, calls with evidence, or where the Mobile Crime Unit will be requested to process a scene,” the press release said.
Local Trending NewsAccording to an investigation by the Pittsburgh-based station WPXI, this means that calls related to crimes such as criminal mischief, theft, harassment and burglary alarms will all be handled by the TRU or other forms of online reporting.
According to WPXI, Pittsburgh Police Chief Larry Scirotto says it’s part of an effort to cut down his department’s call volume from 200,000 to 50,000 calls per year.
The changes come as the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police personnel prepare to transition from working five eight-hour days to four 10-hour days each week. The schedule change is also effective Monday and designed to enhance officer wellness, according to Scirotto.
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Author: Pamela Geller
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