Seattle police will soon need 'supporting evidence' before they'll respond to security alarm calls



The Seattle Police Department will no longer send out patrol units in response to security alarm calls unless they are accompanied by "supporting evidence."

On September 13, Seattle interim police Chief Sue Rahr issued a letter explaining that the department regularly receives a barrage of calls from alarm monitoring companies, and only a tiny fraction of them correspond to actual criminal activity. The vast majority of cases are simply accidental sensor trips or equipment malfunctions, she said.

'There is a better way.'

To demonstrate, Rahr claimed that SPD received 13,000 such alarm calls for businesses and residences in 2023 alone. Of them, fewer than 4% "were confirmed to have a crime associated with them that resulted in an arrest or report being written," she wrote.

Staffing shortages have forced SPD officials to rethink their response protocols. Beginning October 1, SPD will dispatch a patrol unit only when "supporting evidence" — including audio, video, eyewitnesses, and/or a concomitant panic alarm — indicates that a crime is underway.

"With depleted resources we cannot prioritize a patrol response when there is a very low probability that criminal activity is taking place," Rahr said.

"Our highest priority is responding to violent in-progress incidents that threaten the safety of our communities."

Rahr's letter clarified that the new policy will not alter existing licensing and reporting requirements for alarm system monitoring companies as defined in the city municipal code.

The new policy will affect approximately 75,000 alarm sites, KOMO reported.

Representatives from some alarm companies expressed dismay about the policy change, claiming it will especially endanger children and businesses such as banks, pharmacies, and gun stores that carry items coveted by burglars. They were also frustrated that they have been given so little time to prepare for the change.

"The verified response policy has been tried and rejected numerous times including by cities such as Dallas, Texas, and San Jose, California. It goes against best practices established through a collaborative effort by the International Association of Chiefs of Police and the National Sheriff’s Association," said a statement from Washington Alarm.

"Our industry supports the police and agrees that they need to conserve resources. But there is a better way."

Steve Autio of ADI Global Distribution agreed that the new policy will "make the city even less safe."

He also wishes the department had reached out to the alarm companies before sending the letter. "We can work together with the police department to come up with other ideas," Autio told My Northwest.

Members of some companies are expected to attend city council meetings this week to voice their concerns.

H/T: The Post Millennial

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Gun rights advocates raise alarm over Biden ATF pick, who was agent involved in Waco massacre case



Second Amendment advocates are raising the alarm over President Joe Biden's nominee to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

David Chipman is not only a longtime gun control lobbyist, but was actively involved as an agent in the case of the U.S. government killing more than 70 people in a Waco, Texas, massacre in 1993.

What are the details?

Biden announced Chipman as his pick on Thursday, and gun rights advocates were quick to point out that the nominee is a senior advisor to Giffords, a gun control group started by former Rep. Gabbie Giffords (D-Ariz.) and her husband, now-Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.).

Chipman also spent 25 years working as an ATF agent, where he served on the SWAT team for the agency and in other roles.

But a close look at his resume shows that Chipman was a "case agent in [the] Branch Davidian trial" while stationed in Waco, Texas, from 1993 to 1998.

The Branch Davidians lived in a compound in Waco, and 76 people died including women, children, and sect leader David Koresh after a search warrant turned into a standoff where gunfire was exchanged and the building was burned to the ground. Five ATF agents were also killed in the siege, and another 16 injured.

A Reddit thread circulated by several outlets shows that Chipman lied about what occurred at the 1993 tragedy during a question and answer session a year ago.

Chipman wrote that "At Waco, cult members used 2 .50 caliber Barretts to shoot down two Texas Air National Guard helicopters. Point, it is true we are fortunate they are not used in crime more often. The victims of drug lords in Mexico are not so lucky. America plays a role in fueling the violence south of the border."

Fox News' Tucker Carlson pointed out Chipman's comments on his show, "Tucker Carlson Tonight," on Thursday, saying, "No one aboard a federal helicopter was shot or injured that day. The helicopters didn't crash. That is a bizarre claim to make from someone who was directly involved in the case, as David Chipman was."

The Daily Mail published a photo Friday purportedly showing Chipman as a young agent posing in the burned ruins of the Branch Davidian compound, while holding a firearm.

In reaction to Chipman's nomination, National Association for Gun Rights President Dudley Brown told Fox News in a statement, "David Chipman has been on the leading edge of ATF scandals for decades, all the way back to Waco – and now he shills for gun confiscation with Gun Control Inc."

Brown added, "Chipman has embraced every hair-brained gun control scheme proposed, so of course Biden and [Vice President Kamala] Harris chose him – he'll fit right in with their corrupt administration."