As a dispatcher, NYPD traffic during a hot call is my f*cking nightmare. God be with the survivors of this incident and God be with the agency as a whole. I pray a remedy for this communications issue makes itself apparent very soon.
As former Officer the radio traffic is absolutely unacceptable I’m sorry. I’m so so sorry the officer lost his life & for his family & pray the other officer makes it!! May God Bless them. Man
I’m a former NYC EMT and a retired NYC police officer.This is NYC police department. This is everyday. You have to understand, this dispatcher has to transmit calls with a foot pedal, read and type basically in short hand on the screen and listen and control the air. Where were you a cop at. They get almost a million calls a year and it’s extremely stressful.
Great job by the Rookie who was the 3rd officer in Sector David. He just killed the perp who had just killed his 2 partners and calmly called a 10-85 and advised shots fired. Too many Officers talking on radio at once. May God Bless the families of the fallen Officers. Retired NYPD
As a retired mos. For the 80 90 00. The radio was always and will be always like that . There is a lot of cops and everyone is stepping on each other , the training will not stop that , the rush of a mos shot and units 84 on the scene , we all think we are helping by goin* on the radio but not the case .
Can’t help to think how the lack of radio discipline might have contributed to his or other officers’ deaths and in capturing perpetrators by delaying medical care and coordination in creating a path to the hospital and locking down that scene. I can’t say for sure that their radio traffic reflects their chaos on scene but it’s likely. (I intentionally waited a year to post this comment bc I didn’t want to detract from the officer fighting for his life at the time this audio was originally posted.)
RIP to the lost officer and prayers to the injured, but the NYPD radio traffic during these incidents is just terrible. The entire dept needs more training on radio discipline. I've heard too many of these cluster F's on this channel.
I know what I'm listening for and I'm having a hard time understanding who's talking who's not etc. it got better it got better once they got the officers to the hospital but the beginning..wow. Im praying for NYPD and there families for their lost.
Extremely unlikely. You gotta try and understand the haters way more to see why they hate. It’s definitely from being misinformed but it’s not misinformed about the fact that crazy stuff like this happens.
They'll still continue to hate cops like idiots unless one of their loved ones was a cop and had this unfortunate fate. It's a shame that's what it would take to change their minds.
Level 1 is task force. Level 3 is the entire borough. They needed task force *and* units from the entire borough, so they ordered a level 3 *and* level 1.
I’ve heard the radio traffic from 9/11 and they weren’t this back with everyone stepping on each other maybe initially when the planes hit and all the stations were responding but afterwards really only the fire chiefs were on and directing fire crews with the occasional firefighter relaying victims trapped locations and what not. Ngl tho it’s an eerie listen.
I think commenting on problems with radio communication does not detract from the reality of the situation. Communication and coordination was diminished as a result.
@@davidgrossman7965 Obviously “omg” is kind of a comment, but it’s on the reader to know that it was in lieu of actually making a more detailed comment about how horribly bad their radio traffic and radio discipline is. And at the time I didn’t want to get into it because it would be heavily criticizing the department while they have a coworker seriously injured and fighting for his life.
Once again New York failed the test with them radio. They need to learn from Chicago Police, with all due respect. May God bless and protect every blue live out there.
@@SaSZombieAssault1021 If you contacted the station you would know why things were hectic. Especially with two officers down and a trainee with them (by the way who killed the perp) excellent shot trainee 💪🏽 🔫
@@chrisdee9620 I don’t know what you are listening too, but here is one of the latest best handle by Distpach and distressed officers. You can understand everything. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-LH2r_76gWWU.html
@@MediosCorporativos The difference is that NYPD has more resources and Precincts. However there are also 2 Centrals covering simultaneously which makes the process quicker. Especially with how stressful this can be.
I was wondering about that. I was saying if this is how they were for a downed officer how were they for 9-11 and how would they be if something similar occurred.
NYPD is by far the worst for their radio procedures and I've listened to many calls and always sit here thinking - you're all talking over each other, most of you aren't even on scene yet and have no reason to take the channel - STFU and listen, let the unit calling call it and allow the dispatcher to dispatch. Don't be disrespectful to them or talk over them. If the dispatcher doesn't know where you are, God better had otherwise you are truly in the shit. NYPD rates itself as the best police force in the world, but its radio protocol is totally appalling... Someone needs to train their dispatchers and officers on how to manage radio traffic when it hits the fan, everyone talking isn't it!!
Absolutely great job by the dispatcher i know she must be tramatized for the rest of her life..much respect for professional RIP to both officers and to the heroic job the 3rd officer did in that apartment
Holy moly, why in all heck are these guys screaming randomly into the radio? The fire dispatch on 9/11 was less chaotic…even after the towers fell (which says a lot). Dispatch is trying but people are even yelling over her mid sentence. If I was listening to this with no context I’d think this was civilians on a line as it sounds like panic. It gets better halfway through…but I’m mind-blown.
All you former MOS understand how it is, how the fog of war takes over, the traffic was a problem but don't pretend you don't understand how hectic shit gets. It's unfortunate but it is our reality. Don't quaterback these cops that are trying to save a life.
This radio traffic is soooo very unacceptable. Too many people stepping over each other so many people hollering and screaming orders over the air. Rest in peace to Officer Jason Rivera. But this radio traffic was the worst. They all need to be retrained in RADIO TRAFFIC
jesus fucking christ clear the radio and have some fucking leadership skills if that radio traffic ever happened in my city no one would last another minute control your radios
@@davidgrossman7965 People compare us to the entire country when it comes to radio traffic. Remember, all division channels have AT LEAST 2 precincts on each. Some are citywide. Some division channels have 3, even. So for people to compare us to small town police agencies or agencies who don’t even slightly compare to us in numbers. The amount of people we have on one channel amounts to an entire citywide frequency in another city.
As an UMOS, I heard the important details on the radio. I understand what happened and what they were saying. On this night, it was the most horrible night ever, god bless you and your family. We’ll take the line from here brothers, god speed.
XO should only be speaking….. yelling rush on a bus multiple times by multiple mos creates havoc…. horrible situation but units need to get control of emotions and need better radios