Cinnaminson Police Home Page

Cinnaminson Police Now Have An App

Cinnaminson police? There’s an app for that. There’s also a new website for the first time in more than 15 years.

The Cinnaminson Police Department has launched a new app to help residents submit anonymous tips from their smartphone, the department announced on Wednesday. It will also allow officers to respond and create an anonymous two-way conversation.

The Cinnaminson PD App, developed by tip411, removes all identifying information before police see the tips and there is no way to identify the sender, police said.

It also helps residents find information and view alerts. It can be downloaded for free through Google Play, iTunes and through the Cinnaminson Police Department’s new website, which launches Thursday.

The new website will be found at www.cinnaminsonpolice.org. It is the first official webpage the police department has had in over 15 years, according to Cinnaminson Police Chief Richard Calabrese. Screen shots from the new website, provided for use by the police department, are attached to this post.

The app can be downloaded as of Wednesday, but all features will work effective Thursday, Calabrese said.

“Our goal is to keep our community safe for all who live, work, and visit Cinnaminson Township,” Calabrese said. “I believe the new Cinnaminson Township PD app from tip411 will help in those efforts by enhancing our ability to engage our community to help fight crime and support public safety.”

The app is completely paid for using civil forfeiture funds, police said.

“We’ve listened to feedback from partners like Cinnaminson Township Police and have built a more advanced and innovative product to help departments better engage their communities,” tip411 President Terry Halsch said. “The Cinnaminson PD app powered by tip411 will greatly improve the public’s access to agency alerts, social media channels, important information, and more to help fight crime.”

Residents in Cinnaminson Township without a smartphone can share information with police by sending an anonymous text tip via their cell phone to police by texting keyword CINNAMINSONPD and their message/tip to 847411 (tip411). Anonymous web tips can also be submitted through the department’s website.

Police also remind residents that tip411 is not meant to be used for emergencies or even in the urgent need of police assistance. Residents should always call 911 if they have an emergency.

Read the full story from The Patch

Safety Grant

Apply for Grant Funding to Bring tip411 to Your Community’s Schools

$10,000,000 is currently up for grabs through a grant program to increase school safety and prevent school violence through the STOP School Violence Grant Program!  Specifically mentioned in the program description is the goal to:

Develop and implement threat assessment and/or intervention teams to operate technology solutions such as anonymous reporting systems for threats of school violence, including mobile telephone applications, hotlines, and websites. These teams must coordinate with law enforcement agencies and school personnel.

tip411 School Edition is uniquely positioned to satisfy this particular requirement and more. In fact, tip411 School Edition is the solution exclusively recommended by the Onondaga County, NY School Safety Task Force to help increase school safety.

Please reach out to us immediately if you are interested in applying so that we can assist you to the best of our abilities. The application deadline is March 3rd, 2020 with an implementation date of October 1st, 2020.

Tip411 Helps Williamson County Solve Crimes

Williamson County Sheriff’s Office urges the community to text anonymous tips on crimes

The Williamson County Sheriff’s Office is using new technology to make it easier for the community to send in tips on crimes.

With the click of a button a tipster helped culminate weeks of investigation leading to the arrest of a man for selling methamphetamine. It’s a crime the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office would likely never know about if it weren’t for their tip411 program. It’s way to send a tip anonymously through a cell phone or computer.

“With tip411, it’s all done digitally,” Williamson County Sheriff’s Office investigator Paul Lusk said. “You can do it through the county website, our Facebook page, through text message.”

Anyone with a tip can text tip411 (847411) using the keyword ‘tipwcso’ before texting whatever tip the user wants to send. Tipsters can also use an app through iOS and Android, WilliamsonCo Sheriff.

“All of the information is filtered out as far as identifying information and we receive the tip almost instantaneously,” Lusk said. “There’s no way for us to subpoena or court order tip411 to give us the information of who sent the tip in.”

An investigator may respond back to the message looking for more information, but Lusk says they have no way of actually identifying who wrote to them.

They’ve received about 300 tips since the program began about two years ago. Lusk says roughly half of them have led to an arrest. Tipsters can still call Crime Stoppers or departments directly, but tip411 allows for complete anonymity.

“A lot of times people who send in tips are friends and family of the people that they’re tipping about or giving information about and they don’t want to be the black sheep of the family,” Lusk said. “They don’t want to have retaliation.”

Lusk says most tips have been drug related, but hopes more messages will lead to arrests on all sorts of crimes they may never know about without the community’s help.

“We have limited staff. We’re actually shorthanded right now. If we only have six or seven guys covering the entire county, they can patrol around and see what they see going through neighborhoods and try to proactively stop crime, but to us it’s more important for the neighbors, coworkers, just the community in general to be able to see stuff,” Lusk said. “They see it 24 hours a day. They live with it and there’s no way for us to know that some of that stuff is going on unless it’s reported and we feel like this is a safe way to do it.”

Anyone who is in an emergency should call 911. The Williamson County Emergency Management Agency is still working on a county wide program for texting 911 they hope to implement in summer 2020.

Lusk also reminded the community to save the tip411 for crimes because they investigate every tip that comes in seriously.

See the full story from NewsChannel5.com

City of Johnstown, Pennsylvania City Picture

Johnstown police locate wanted man through tip411 smartphone application

Tips received through the Johnstown Police Department’s new tip411 smartphone application helped lead to the apprehension of a city man who was wanted on several outstanding warrants, police Capt. Chad Miller wrote in an email Friday.

“This is just one example of how tip411 is helping us locate wanted individuals and get them off the streets,” Miller wrote. “Tip411 is also helping us locate drug trafficking areas in and out of the city that we were previously unaware of.”

Miller wrote that the police department received several tips about Jamie Blough, 47, of the Woodvale section of Johnstown, who was arrested Friday.

Read the full story from the Tribune-Democrat