Dalton tip411 press release

“I’d rather they engage with us anonymously than not at all. This is what tip411 does, and I’m a true believer in that approach.”

tip411 interviewed Major David Dalton of the Clearwater Police Department in Clearwater, Florida.

Q: Tell us about Clearwater and your department (how many residents, how many sworn, etc.).
A:
Clearwater is a City of about 110,000 residents that spans approximately 25 square miles on Florida’s Gulf Coast in the state’s most populous county, Pinellas. It is the third largest city in the Tampa Bay area and it is a unique city with three separate geographic districts; each district presents its own unique challenges. – The East District is a mostly suburban, residential area with significant shopping and commuter activity. Our West District encompasses our downtown core, a major regional hospital, and other business entities. Our Beach District comprises Clearwater Beach, which is a nationally and internationally known tourist destination, which has been ranked “Best Beach in the United States” several times, as well as the “best Place to Watch a Sunset” in the United States.

The Clearwater Police Department is a mid-size department of 238 sworn officers. As a full service law enforcement agency, we deal with many of the same challenges as much larger cities. We have the added challenge of being host to a significant tourist and Spring Break/Spring Training population visiting our City.  With this influx of visitors and non-residents, as well as people crossing jurisdictional lines frequently and not necessarily knowing it in this small, but populated county, we needed a way for citizens, residents, and business owners to contact us in a manner that is convenient, effective, and cost efficient.

Q: How is tip411 administered in your department department (responsibilities, protocols, etc.)?
A:
Initially we started with just tip functionality only. When we launched with tip411 in 2010 we simultaneously began a CompStat program, which was formulated through a centralized Crime Analysis Unit. So, at first, the Crime Analysis Unit and I were the main administrators of the program. When tips came in we would farm them out to patrol, narcotics, etc.

As the popularity of the system grew, we realized there was a need for 24/7 coverage because we wanted to make sure people weren’t texting us tips and then waiting for a response to come during normal business hours. We made a decision as an organization that we wanted give virtual real time feedback to any received tips. That’s when we gave additional responsibility to our Communications Center Supervisors to monitor the system after hours and respond to tips when needed, while the Crime Analysis Unit remains in charge of responding to tips during business hours and cataloging and assigning each received tip.

Our Crime Analysis Unit logs every tip we receive, which has helped us track and report the types of tips we receive, who they are assigned to, and the impact and success of tip411 to our Chief of Police.

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Q: How has the tip411 system aided your department?
A:
From our perspective, it’s a critical and essential tool. I can’t think of another mechanism that gets people to freely engage directly with our Department and give us information on a variety of crimes and problems in their community.

In the past, we may have gotten narcotics tips from residents who were inclined to contact us anyway, but we were missing out on those residents who thought they saw something suspicious or unusual, but didn’t really know who to contact. tip411 helps us with a citywide approach where we’re able to reach across populations, demographics, across crime types, and that’s a huge benefit. In this day and age, virtually everyone has a cellular phone or access to the internet, so it can reach a multitude of populations.

Frankly, I’m okay with people who want to engage with us anonymously – Whatever mechanism they feel comfortable with; you want to give them a tool that they will feel comfortable using. I’d rather they engage with us anonymously than not at all. This is what tip411 does, and I’m a true believer in that approach.

We started off with just tips, and then incorporated citizen alerts through the bundle package, so we were able to send out information vital to different geographic areas in the city and alert citizens about isolated incidents of crime or concerns specific to particular communities. We now have tip411 Pro and our own smartphone app that allows us to not only receive tips, but push out information specific to particular crimes, allows us to share crime mapping information, links to important agency information, as well as our social media accounts.

In 2016, our department received 435 unique tips through tip411, and I truly believe that all of the information we’re getting is intelligence that we probably never would have received if people didn’t have the ability to share it with us quickly, safely, and anonymously.

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Q: Any notable tips/arrests credited to tip411 that come to mind?
A:
Many. One that comes to mind is when we had an individual wanted for armed robbery; we had been searching for him locally for quite a while. We got a tip from an individual who knew where he was and we were able to engage with them on tip411 and obtain additional information, which wasn’t included in the original tip. They were able to give us, down to the room number, where he was staying in a hotel in Louisiana. We gave that information to the US Marshals and they were able to apprehend him immediately. It also aided us in obtaining tactical information which was beneficial to our approach to the wanted person.

Another example occurred when we got information via text about a male at a certain location with a significant amount of marijuana. We got the tip, dispatched it quickly to some of narcotics oriented Patrol Officers, and they found nearly a pound of marijuana in the house.

Q: How do you use your department’s social media accounts with tip411 to help get the word out?
A:
We try to get tip411 information out to the public as much as we can to try to maximize its usage by residents and visitors to our area. We use it in virtually every instance in which we ask for the public’s assistance. Even when we use another social media platforms, like Twitter, to shares suspect images, videos, etc., we ask followers to submit information using tip411. It doesn’t matter to our agency if it is a routine retail theft case or a murder investigation, we include that as a resource to the public.

Q: What have you done to brand and promote the tip411 system in Clearwater?
A:
We try to feature it prominently on our website and we push it out as I said through Facebook, Twitter, and other forms of social media. In every community alert that we send, we include our tip411 information. We put it on flyers, on crime alerts – just about anything we send to the public.

When we canvass neighborhoods and leave door hangers, our tip411 info is on them. We include it on our business cards, just about anywhere imaginable, so that tip411 is virtually synonymous – in the public’s mind – with the Clearwater Police Department.

Q: So, why tip411?
A: To me, one of the most significant aspects of tip411 is the “loop of communication” it creates, with the anonymous tipping and community alerts working together. Anyone can have what they describe as an “anonymous” tip service, but people are smart and they know if they have to send a tip through their email, that someone could trace it back to them one way or another.

That’s why, prior to tip411, we’ve had very limited success with other types of “anonymous” reporting services, because they know it could be tracked and that causes the public to be reticent to share information.  Our experience is that the public feels comfortable that they are truly anonymous with tip411 and that allows us to not only receive tips and information, but also have an opportunity to build trust and have additional communication with them.

“For the dollars, the effort, the functionality, and the outcome…it’s money well spent”

tip411 interviewed Chief Paul Schnell of the Maplewood Police Department in Maplewood, Minnesota.

 

Q: Tell us about Maplewood and your department (how many residents, how many sworn, etc.).
A:
Maplewood is a community of 40,000 people. It’s a first-ring suburb of St. Paul, Minnesota and is home to the world headquarters of 3M Corporation.

We are a full-service law enforcement agency with 53 sworn officers and our department is in a unique position because of the higher growth in urban type crime we are witnessing – gang related crime, homicides, assaults – but also our neighborhoods where there are quality of life issues – parking, disorderly people in parks, etc.

Q: How is the tip411 system used in your community?
A:
We’ve used tip411 for about 2 years now and it’s really been an important tool for our department.

We have the tips app for smartphones, the text a tip line, and have the information on our Facebook page and website.

We’ve had five homicides in the last year, and in each of those cases, and every major crime in our community, we’ve used tip411 in a significant way. These crimes create high levels of fear in the community, so tip411 is a great way allow people to communicate with us.

Q: How is tip411 administered in your department (responsibilities, protocols, etc.)?
A:
We have a county-based dispatch center, so dispatchers can’t be used to manage tips around the clock as they are busy responding to calls. Instead, inside our department we have a group of five administrative and investigative staff that can check and respond to tips we receive through the tip411 dashboard that has gotten better over time at helping us manage tips.

Knowing that we can’t monitor and respond to tips 24/7, we’ve publicized over and over that this is system is not monitored 24 hours a day and is not a replacement for emergency types of messages.

Q: What have you done to brand and promote the tip411 system in Maplewood?
A:
Several things have been successful for us in terms of promotion. As I said, we post information to Facebook, Twitter, and every crime release we send out when we’re looking for the public’s help to solve crimes.

But we’ve also thought of creative ways like teaming up with the city’s public works department around pothole reporting. We put out a release asking community members to use tip411 to text us locations of potholes, and to pictures if they wanted. We received many reports and forwarded them directly to public works.

Of course this isn’t typically what a police department would focus on, but we view potholes and other types of non-crime reports as quality of life stuff that is important to people. And, for us, getting people to use tip411 to report potholes has been a mechanism for us to get people to use the system and become comfortable if/when they need to report more sensitive or crime-related information.

We’re also beginning to roll a program around human trafficking. Domestic trafficking and sexual exploitation of young people is an important issue and we’ve worked with tip411 to have an additional keyword (“SAFE”) to use in partnership with a domestic violence shelter that provides resources for victims. When people text tips using this keyword, program staff at a 24 hour domestic violence hotline and they manage and respond to those tips.

We are encouraging young people and people who may know about people who are being exploited to send information so we can try to make contact.

Because tip411 is not just a passive system, but one that allows us to actually engage in conversations with people, its been helpful for people to gauge whether or not they can trust us or a program.

Q: Any notable tips/arrests credited to tip411 that come to mind?
A:
We had a homicide this past July and the suspect took off and left the area. We had no idea where he went but we published information about the crime with our tip411 information on Facebook, Twitter, our website, and in press releases to local media. Low and behold we got an anonymous text tip that the suspect was in a city, first in Wisconsin, and then in Illinois.

Our investigators used tip411 to engage in a conversation with the tipster – it was trust building. The tipster needed to know we weren’t going to be reckless with information and expose them.

After several days of back and forth, the tipster provided information to help us identify the location of the suspect who was then apprehended.

tip411 led us to that person through an engaged tipster based on the communications ability the system offers and that suspect is now pending trial for murder.

Q: So, why tip411?
A: For us, it’s a good value – It’s not super expensive, it’s simple to use, and simple to implement. It provides a good backend for us to manage and monitor so you not only see the tips but also who they were assigned to, if they are active, etc.

Q: Anything you would tell other agencies considering tip411?
A: I don’t believe there’s ever been a time in recent history where its as important as it is right now for law enforcement to lean in and provide every mechanism for people to communicate and engage with us.

This is especially true for people who may not trust us as much.

tip411 helps a conversation to develop and build that trust that’s necessary.

For the dollars, the effort, the functionality, and the outcome…it’s money well spent.