better dead than red
Well-Known Member
To add on to what you said, depending on locality especially in bigger cities, an officer just beginning his or her shift may well have tens of calls for service left over from the last shift which need to be responded to at some point before they have even hit the streets.Read my post. Edit-i note you did..
How do frontline officers respond to burglaries, thefts etc if those same officers are committed with mental health patients, missing persons (see mental health), suicidal people (see mental health), vulnerable prisoners (see mental health) and all the other stuff that in a fully invested public service other providers would pick up or stop from reaching that point in the first place.
There isn't a never ending pot of officers. I think you'd be alarmed at the number of officers covering your area on a busy afters or nights shift.
Patel calling for police to return to basics conveniently removes herself from the actual problem. They are the cause of this. I can assure you police want to deal with crime.
For those who wonder why it may take hours or a day for the police to show up to take a theft report or because their home was burgled that is often why.
Is the burglar still there? That is a different story. You'll likely get an immediate response. However, going round to take a report will come second or third to someone who is immediately in distress or danger.
