6.0 Technical English and Investigative Report Writing
6.0 Technical English and Investigative Report Writing
6.1 The Basic Police Report and Report Writing (two kinds:)
6.1.1 Basic informal report (any written matter prepared by the police
involving their interaction with the community)
6.1.2 Investigative or formal report (an exact narration of facts which were
discovered during the course of crime investigation which serves as a
permanent record for future reference)
Final: written and submitted whenever the case is solved and classified as
closed. It is categorized as solve and closed when the offender is finally
arrested, the evidence against him is completely gathered to warrant
prosecution, and witnesses located to testify for trial.
6.2.1 Gathering the facts (conduct a thorough investigation at the crime scene
—indoor, outdoor, vehicles—or elsewhere that the investigator will
discover physical evidence, facts and other information)
6.2.2 Interview and interrogating (an “observe and listen” strategy, witness
and informants are interviewed and suspects and offenders are
interrogated)
6.2.3 Recording the facts (immediately and accurately the investigator must
record in his clipboard, not in his memory, the facts gathered)
6.2.5 Evaluating the facts (i.e., editing and proof-reading what you have
written before it can be considered a finished product for submission to
higher officials)
Editing means determining the facts of the report, i.e., the answers to the
5W’s and one H, to ensure that its content is complete; Proof-reading
means determining its mechanical format, or form, such as with the
compliance with the basic elements of grammar, punctuations, spelling,
capitalization, sentence structure and paragraph construction.
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Note: Initial, progress and final are also known as advance, follow-up and closing
reports, respectively.
Outline
Technical English
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6.3.1 The report should be accurate, brief, clear, complete, factual, fair,
objective, relevant and up-to-date.
Accurate: means free from error or in exact conformity with the truth,
i.e., based on facts, which are known through the use of any/ all of his
fiver senses.
Complete: i.e., report all the facts which were discovered in the course of
investigation.
Objective: means presenting all the facts with appropriate words; words
not coated or laced with emotional overtones; that the tone and content of
the report should be entirely free of propaganda.
6.4.1 Selection and use of words (words are only tools of communication—
the first integral part which makes up the whole narration of facts) through
adequate use of:
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6.4.2 Vocabulary and Diction: (vocabulary means the supply of words which
we know and use, Diction is the direct choice of words, selecting the
exact, precise, objective words to convey meaning.
1. Setting:
2. Character:
3. Action:
6.6 Punctuation and its Kinds (punctuation marks are used to separate the
written into sentences; Kinds – the period, question mark, exclamation
mark, comma, semicolon, colon, quotation marks, apostrophe, parenthesis,
hyphen)
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6.7 The Investigative Report
The three (3) basic units comprising any written matter are words, sentences and
paragraphs.
As fact-finder and report writer, one must be understood by his reader through the
use of adequate vocabulary and selection of the right words. The best rule is to use
common words understandable to a general reading level; legal, technical and slang terms
should be used only when necessary.
A sentence has two main components: subject and predicate. Both may include
modifiers (descriptive words and phrases). Length and construction of the sentence are
varied. Generally, a sentence has 20 words. Pay special attention to key words: verbs,
pronouns, adjectives and adverbs. The verb is the main word in the predicate; it expresses
action or the condition of the subject. Verbs have tense: present, past, future. Generally;
police reports are stated in the past tense and in the third person.
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Rules concerning numbers:
The Semicolon:
Definition of Terms:
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After operation report - it is a report that may be rendered after any successful
police operation that leads to the arrest of any member or some members of
syndicated crime group.
After soco report - it is a report rendered by the team leader of the SOCO that
conducted the scene of the crime operations, processing or investigation.
Agents report - it is a report rendered by a documented agent who answers an
intelligence requirement.
Agreement - Proposal. A proposal remains an offer even if not answered and
irrespective of the length of time that has passed. It only becomes an agreement
when accepted by the other party.(PNP definition).
Book of account - a book containing charges and showing a continuous dealing
with persons generally. To be admissible in evidence, it must be kept as
an account book and the charges made in the usual course of business.
Case officer - the person responsible for and in charge of the investigation of the
case.
Police blotter - a record or log where all types of operational and under cover
dispatches shall be recorded containing the 5 "W" and 1 "H"(Who, What, Where,
When, Why, and How of an information.
Spot report - refers to an immediate initial investigative or incident report
addressed to higher headquarters pertaining to the commission of the crime,
occurrence of natural or man-made disaster or unusual incidents involving loss of
lives and damage of properties.
Tactical interrogation report - the report rendered by an interrogator which
contain the following information: 1. Personal and family background 2.
Educational background 3. Professional background 4. Criminal
activities,associates/armaments 5. Plans
Summary of information (SOI) - an intelligence report rendered regarding any
illegal activity or violation of laws being observed by intelligence operatives
within a given area of responsibility. This is the usual basis of case operations
hence, information received should be cared, validated, countered checked,
analyzed and evaluated.
Police Report - report made by the police containing the initial statement made
by the victim at the time she or he reported the crime. A police report consists of a
testament, specific details of the event and names of peopleinvolved.
Index Crime - are very serious crimes that happen frequently or regularly that
they can serve as index of the crime situation. Index Crime is basically anything
that is physically pursued by the person committing the crime while non index
crimes consists of non physical confrontation.
Non Index Crime - refers to all crime not classified as index crime. These crimes
are mostly victimless.
Crime Solution Efficiency - means the number of crimes solved after the arrest
of the suspects and filing of charges against them.
Crime Clearance Efficiency - means the number of crimes considered solved
because the suspects have been identified and charged but they remain at large.
Crime Incidence - the number of crimes reported as index or non index crimes
within a given period.
Crime Volume - is a basic indicator of the frequency of known criminal activity.
It represents the number of reported offenses.
Crime Trend - represents the percentagechange in crime based on data reported
in a prior equivalent period.
Crime Rate - the measure that gives an index of crime occurring in a particular
jurisdiction for a specific time period.
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