basic police reporting

24
COVERING THE COP SHOP Andrew Chavez

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Andrew Chavez outlines the basics of police reporting during this presentation from the Covering Texas Courts workshop presented by the Texas Center for Community Journalism in May 2011.

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Page 1: Basic police reporting

COVERING THE COP SHOPAndrew Chavez

Page 2: Basic police reporting

THREE KEY STEPS OF CRIME REPORTING Story generation

Knowing that a story exists or Reporting

Getting the facts as soon as possible Properly developing a story

Follow-up Staying on top of a story Finding all angles Providing a resolution to the storyline

Page 3: Basic police reporting

STORY GENERATIONThe most important step

Page 4: Basic police reporting

WHERE STORIES COME FROMRumors

5%

Tips from LE29%

Scanner24%

Beat reporting43%

Page 5: Basic police reporting

GENERATING STORIES Rumors Tips Scanner Beat reporting +

Good police reporting is about running traps

Page 6: Basic police reporting

GENERATING STORIES Rumors / Tips

Can generate first stories and folos (case developments, settlements, etc.)

Easiest way to get stories Least reliable method Some stories will only happen this way

Getting more tips Be willing to entertain tipsters Keep contact information visible in all locations

(even on every page of site) Read comments on stories

Page 7: Basic police reporting

GENERATING STORIES Scanner

High payoff with little effort Anyone can listen to it (not just reporters) Not quotable, but can lead to good info Great way to get visuals

Getting more from the scanner Use a handheld and take it to scenes with you Get to know the codes (many are available

online)

Page 8: Basic police reporting

GENERATING STORIES Beat reporting

How do you define beat reporting?

Page 9: Basic police reporting

GENERATING STORIES Beat reporting

Building relationships with sources Staying on top of stories (75/25) Being the person who runs the traps Establishing yourself as the in-house expert Cover all angles of the beat while others

sometime take low-hanging fruit The police reporter isn’t the person who writes

the crime stories

Page 10: Basic police reporting

BUILD RELATIONSHIPS Have a presence Cultivate sources before you need

them Throw them some fluff Keep a dialogue open Don’t let bad habits persist Develop a phonefile

Page 11: Basic police reporting

SET MULTIPLE TRAPS Scanner Reports Check-in calls Use your whole staff Don’t forget fire and EMS (they’re at

the big stuff, too)

Page 12: Basic police reporting

REPORTINGGetting the info you need

Page 13: Basic police reporting

THE TOOLS

•Required by federal law on federally-funded roads (interstates, state and county roads)•Available from NNA for $15

•Handheld is ideal•Find the frequencies online•Check the iPhone/Web apps

•Big pad is great for sketching•Small one best for back pocket

Page 14: Basic police reporting

THE TOOLS

•Audio, video recorder•Camera•Mobile address book•Inconspicuous

•Instantly duplicate important source documents•Leave with photos, videos

Page 15: Basic police reporting

BE PRECISEFocus on the 5WsEstablish a timelineDon’t “write around it” – admit

what you don’t knowDitch the jargon

Page 16: Basic police reporting

CYAAttribute, attribute, attributeGet the documents, recordings,

videos …Verify accounts (try a timeline or

sketch)Be a detective and a defense

attorneySave contact info for your sourcesConsult the AP Stylebook

Page 17: Basic police reporting

GET OUTReach out to the accusedTalk to the familiesVisit the crime sceneFind witnesses

… You owe it to them

Page 18: Basic police reporting

FOLLOWING UP

Page 19: Basic police reporting

YOUR SOURCES

Police reports

Court filings

Raw' items

Police interviews

Witness interviews

Victim interviews

Accused interviews

0% 10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%

Page 20: Basic police reporting

FOLLOW THROUGHIt doesn’t end at the arrestBe consistent about your treatments

– headlines, page position, etc.Keep case filesRun trapsKeep a calendar and use others’

calendarsCheck on court dates, scheduled

events in advance

Page 21: Basic police reporting

FOLLOW THROUGH

• Just the facts, ma’am

5Ws story

• Victim/accused profile

• Detailed, narrative account

Human story • Incremental

stories• Explaining the

stalemate• Unsolved

mysteryUpdate

• Case comparison

• Stats story

Trend

Page 22: Basic police reporting

SOME RESOURCES

Page 23: Basic police reporting

SOME RESOURCES Dart Center for Journalism & Trauma

http://dartcenter.org/ Covering Crime and Justice: A guide for

journalistshttp://www.justicejournalism.org/crimeguide/

Freedom of Information Foundation of Texashttp://foift.org/

Page 24: Basic police reporting

Q&A TIME