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Since people are wondering why the shelter in place warning was issued, I’ll explain it to you. On September 20, 2014, a manhunt in Pennsylvania was conducted. This happened in Monroe county for Barrett and Price townships. The police were looking for a man who killed a trooper and heavily injured another trooper. This man was in the top 10 of the FBI wanted list. Now, I’ve never heard of this alert, even though I live in PA. I live on the other side of the state, so that’s why I never had to lockdown.
Yeah the rushing around to get to the radio was cool, here is my idea for EAS alert radio I thought about this scenario after watching many EAS scenarios on RU-vid and driving. Since many people no longer watch over the air or cable TV, they might only get a warning on their cell phones. So maybe there could be an emergency scenario where a person receives a warning about an incoming ballistic missile alert on their cell phones....they quickly get on Twitter or other news aggregators. The internet, in the person's area, is very slow since so many people are using it at the same time, the cell phone emergency alert tells them to tune to a local radio station, the person finds out that they have about 15 minutes to get to minimum safe distance. The person lives in a high rise apartment near the city center. You hear and see the person quickly scurrying about (first person view) getting keys and a backpack full of stuff, food water, looking for a flashlight, batteries, etc. They receive another cell phone alert telling them they now have 10 min before impact, (sort of like a count down), the person goes into overdrive as they frantically try to get whatever they think is valuable into their backpack. You hear them breathing hard and quickly as they feel panic coming on, they quickly bound down the stairs (in the background you hear the cell phone alert going off again, the person doesn't look at it) they get into the car and floor it trying to get away from the center of their city. The streets may be covered in snow or it may raining. On the way to trying to get away from the center of the city, the person drives recklessly as many others are also frantically trying to escape, they drive on sidewalks, on the wrong side of road, eventually the person driving gets into a crash, they are still conscious. Then the screen goes white in the nuclear flash, for about 15 seconds, the person is really close, then a second or two later the boom and shockwave as the car tumbles about.
This is why those radios should be kept spread throughout the house and not clustered together. I'm hoping the uploader hsd those radios together only because he was making a video demonstration of them at the time.
I actually remember hearing about that on my local news, there was actually concern of the alert being spread into our area (New York) because we didn't know how far the guy was going to get
Fernando Libramonte it is a warning to take shelter wherever you are...but the "in place" part means that people in the warned area should not leave their homes (or wherever they happen to be when the warning is issued). In this case it was because an armed and dangerous fugitive was on the run in the area.
i like how brave people are to just doing normal stuff, and then go to their noaa radios as soon as an event is happening, even if its the most dangerous alerts
SPCmaverick1869 it's where you stay inside and get away from Windows and doors and lock and shut them... It's exactly like a tornado warning EXEPT for the basement which is optional
The first person footage of someone frantically running through their house as the EAS alarm blares while the person is saying “ITS HAPPENING” feels like the opening to a horror video.
Well, the rush describes me when I hear the EAS going off, too. Actually slipped and fell HARD recently when I heard a FFW, but I missed all the alerts that night.
Hes excited hes a weather geek. Im just like him. In the living room if they tv was like *ERR ERR BEEEEEEEEEEEEP* for any weather alert i would be like *stumbles down the hallway* -ITS HAPPENINGGGGGG YEEEEEEAH-
I remember this. I live up in Lycoming County and every day I was hoping to finally hear they caught the bastard. He was on the run for like a month I think.
Interesting, I'm considering getting a NOAA alert radio just in case there is a nuke attack at night. Rushing to get to your radio was cool here is my idea using EAS and alerts I thought about this scenario after watching many EAS scenarios on RU-vid and driving. Since many people no longer watch over the air or cable TV, they might only get a warning on their cell phones. So maybe there could be an emergency scenario where a person receives a warning about an incoming ballistic missile alert on their cell phones....they quickly get on Twitter or other news aggregators. The internet, in the person's area, is very slow since so many people are using it at the same time, the cell phone emergency alert tells them to tune to a local radio station, the person finds out that they have about 15 minutes to get to minimum safe distance. The person lives in a high rise apartment near the city center. You hear and see the person quickly scurrying about (first person view) getting keys and a backpack full of stuff, food water, looking for a flashlight, batteries, etc. They receive another cell phone alert telling them they now have 10 min before impact, (sort of like a count down), the person goes into overdrive as they frantically try to get whatever they think is valuable into their backpack. You hear them breathing hard and quickly as they feel panic coming on, they quickly bound down the stairs (in the background you hear the cell phone alert going off again, the person doesn't look at it) they get into the car and floor it trying to get away from the center of their city. The streets may be covered in snow or it may raining. On the way to trying to get away from the center of the city, the person drives recklessly as many others are also frantically trying to escape, they drive on sidewalks, on the wrong side of road, eventually the person driving gets into a crash, they are still conscious. Then the screen goes white in the nuclear flash, for about 15 seconds, the person is really close, then a second or two later the boom and shockwave as the car tumbles about.
I watched the various "nuke attack" prep and test videos from the 1950s and 1960s and then I learned that the atomic testing films done at the time were already obsolite (mostly Hiroshima style bombs used), and that prep films were more intended to humor the public than to provide actual advice. The situation was even more rediculous in the UK with the suggestion of building lean-to's inside your home out of crap found around the house and somehow surviving in a space the size of a casket for two weeks. If you are far away from major cities or other likely targets, maybe you will be OK in the short term, but the situation will quickly deteriorate dealing with fallout, possible nuclear winter, and traumatized, angry mobs. In this case, I'd probally rather be killed in the blast and just get it over with. :-\
Currently, there is a man who has killed a Pennsylvania State Trooper and injured another. The man is heavily armed and is evading police capture. This alert is telling residents in the warning area to stay inside and away from the windows because a dangerous person is on the loose. These warnings are EXTREMELY rare and this is the 4th one I have ever gotten! Thanks for your comment!
***** Wow, that sounds horrible... I'll look up the incident online, see how its going later. It's really strange to see how you have these kind of defence and warning systems in place over there. where I am, we literally have nothing to prepare us if something like this happened except the news channel on TV. and that is for the whole UK so it can't broadcast any local news!
I think (I think) the Home office have an emergency broadcast system, but that's probably only in conjunction with the Defense department or Country Wide Emergencies. I don't think we have a local emergency broadcast system, I like to say we do have some sort of "EAS" local emergency broadcasting system that hasn't been used but yeah. The only drama I had on TV is when I was watching a program and then the BBC interrupted the broadcast for Nelson Mandela's death.
Creeper 34lol yeah it dosent matter where you are, towers and transceivers will get the message to you. But the government probably have local warning systems but don't say anything.
MOStormChaser there was a manhunt for a man who was wanted for killing a police officer and wounding another. I believe he was among the top 10 most wanted on the FBI list, he was captured fortunately.
Fun Fact: This was actually more of an excessive heat warning. You can hear when he turns off the radio and another radio says that “The temperature was recorded above 77 degrees”. The more you know! 🤓
That was just part of the regular NWS broadcast, on one of the radios that didn’t receive the alert Apparently the real reason for the shelter in place was for some dangerous criminal