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To: G.Mason

The technique is well-known in marketing research and is called "mystery shopper." Generally we think of this as someone sent into a department store to make a staged purchase or a customer service contact like returning an item and afterwards writing a report about their eperience. It is a simple quality control technique. Except in this case, the "sales clerk" is armed with both an attitude and a firearm. At least one officer needs to be relieved of his law enforcement license, pronto.


13 posted on 03/02/2006 5:23:15 AM PST by NonValueAdded ("If I were a Cuban, I'd certainly be on a raft," Isane Aparicio Busto)
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To: NonValueAdded
Nah ... no sale.

The question left unanswered is ...

IS THERE SUCH A FORM EXISTING IN POLICE DEPARTMENTS? ... or is the standard procedure, in the case of a complaint against a police official, that one would be required to state the offence, and who committed the alleged offence, to a desk official, and then is interviewed by an official in charge of that type of incident, where a report is written up by him, (detective comes to mind) much like any "incident" report would be.


One cannot simply go into a police department and ask for a missing persons report, if ones child, wife, or other was missing. You would be interviewed by the desk officer, show ID if requested, and give the particulars of the incident, BEFORE you would be allowed further access.

Like it or don't!






14 posted on 03/02/2006 9:56:17 AM PST by G.Mason (Duty, Honor, Country)
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