Should've also asked what the Miranda rights are: 1. The right to remain silent (anything they say may be used as evidence against them) 2. The right to an attorney (also mention that if they can't afford to hire an attorney, one can be appointed for them)
lol the police questions are definitely harder than fire questions. And I believe they never use that terms in the show. Like Chicago Fire, they use a lot of real terms and of course real tools in the show so the actors know most of the answers. They should put some real facts in the show too so the actors know what it's like to be real police.
The fire test is a boat load of nonsense, and in terms of radio usage, our county dispatch requires english to be used. No numbers, no codes, just plain language. The only exception is a few terms that come over from City, some of us are from, or work for, the city, and their terms are a tad different. We call for an air truck, they call for Mac, we have RIT, they have ‘go teams’.
@@J_-ou7yj Chicago PD irl uses plain English, and they only have three 10 codes. THREE. 10-1 = Officer needs help (sometimes Chicago Fire crews may use a 10-1, like when Ambo 61 got caught up in a gang shootout) 10-4 = Basically the same as everywhere, 'Understood' (can only be used by 2 man patrol units) 10-99 = Same as 10-4, but used for one man units
You don't need to read miranda rights to a criminal when they are arrested... You only need to read them when they are being questioned. Most police departments do read them at the second the criminal is being arrested but I would assume that this is to make sure the criminal has them read at some point before the questioning.
@@MustafaAli-ms4iv Wrong. They only NEED to be given during custodial interrogation. Many places do it immediately, to avoid getting it thrown out, but it's only legally required when asking a suspect questions when they are in custody. If they're not in custody (ie they are free to leave) they arent obligated to be Mirandised and if they're in custody but police are not questioning them, it's not required. And if you spontaneously volunteer information at any point when they are not required to have read your rights, it is admissible.
Not surprised they know none of them cause I'm at least 96 percent sure Chicago PD doesn't use 10 codes. At least ask them actual Illinois law than codes the real department doesn't even use.
@@Cal90208 they use regular English, cpd only has 3 10-codes( 10-1, 10-4, and 10-99) and the rest are letter and numbers, they would call in 2d for example, 2 means teenagers causing disturbance and d means perpetrator gone on police arrival. It’s really cool.
@@MustafaAli-ms4iv 10-1 means officer in need of assistance, 10-4 means acknowledged by a 2 officer unit, and 10-99 means acknowledged by a 1 officer unit.
Chicago PD irl uses plain English, and they only have three 10 codes. THREE. 10-1 = Officer needs help (sometimes Chicago Fire crews may use a 10-1, like when Ambo 61 got caught up in a gang shootout) 10-4 = Basically the same as everywhere, 'Understood' (can only be used by 2 man patrol units) 10-99 = Same as 10-4, but used for one man units
1030 does not means robbery in progress. In Chicago there no such thing as robbery in progress code. They will be a code only when generation a report.
@@MustafaAli-ms4iv Chicago PD irl uses plain English, and they only have three 10 codes. THREE. 10-1 = Officer needs help (sometimes Chicago Fire crews may use a 10-1, like when Ambo 61 got caught up in a gang shootout) 10-4 = Basically the same as everywhere, 'Understood' (can only be used by 2 man patrol units) 10-99 = Same as 10-4, but used for one man units
10-85 differs per jurisdictions. Most 10-codes do. Hence why most jurisdictions are moving away from them. Especially in the Fire Service as 9/11 proved 10-codes were becoming very ineffective.
Chicago PD irl uses plain English, and they only have three 10 codes. THREE. 10-1 = Officer needs help (sometimes Chicago Fire crews may use a 10-1, like when Ambo 61 got caught up in a gang shootout) 10-4 = Basically the same as everywhere, 'Understood' (can only be used by 2 man patrol units) 10-99 = Same as 10-4, but used for one man units
No. Chicago PD irl uses plain English, and they only have three 10 codes. THREE. 10-1 = Officer needs help (sometimes Chicago Fire crews may use a 10-1, like when Ambo 61 got caught up in a gang shootout) 10-4 = Basically the same as everywhere, 'Understood' (can only be used by 2 man patrol units) 10-99 = Same as 10-4, but used for one man units
@@kameroncrook1939 Chicago PD irl uses plain English, and they only have three 10 codes. THREE. 10-1 = Officer needs help (sometimes Chicago Fire crews may use a 10-1, like when Ambo 61 got caught up in a gang shootout) 10-4 = Basically the same as everywhere, 'Understood' (can only be used by 2 man patrol units) 10-99 = Same as 10-4, but used for one man units
Chicago PD irl uses plain English, and they only have three 10 codes. THREE. 10-1 = Officer needs help (sometimes Chicago Fire crews may use a 10-1, like when Ambo 61 got caught up in a gang shootout) 10-4 = Basically the same as everywhere, 'Understood' (can only be used by 2 man patrol units) 10-99 = Same as 10-4, but used for one man units