4.4 • 63.3K Ratings
🗓️ 13 December 2016
⏱️ 7 minutes
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0:00.0 | What if comparing car insurance rates was as easy as putting on your favorite podcast? |
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0:27.3 | states or situations. Price is very based on how you buy. In today's episode, I'm going to |
0:32.0 | review those dispatch logs again. She mentioned them but I don't know if they were done because she got |
0:37.9 | called out. Dispatch logs? I've got to go through them but I'm having to work the ready |
0:41.6 | overnight. Dispatch logs. I have them. I have them ready but the thing is you're going to have to |
0:47.2 | have a certain type of paper to be able to proceed. Those dispatch logs. The most important part |
0:54.8 | about these logs is anything pertaining to Sean Fletcher because according to Marcus Harper, |
1:00.4 | they both rode around in the cop car on the night of terrorist's appearance. Today, I'm going |
1:04.7 | to break down these dispatch logs in detail and go over every call that night. This is case evidence. |
1:25.0 | Each entry in these dispatch logs has a time and a radio signal tin code. These tin codes are |
1:31.6 | what the officers use to communicate. You're probably familiar with tin 4, which means understood. |
1:36.5 | A lot of these codes are universal but sometimes they can vary with different precincts. |
1:41.1 | Each code has a different meaning and there can be a lot of them. So just to be safe, |
1:45.1 | I spoke to an actual Oslo police officer who deciphered each code in the log for me. He wished |
1:50.8 | not to be named. There were two Oslo police officers on duty that night. Sean Fletcher and Shane |
1:56.4 | Kisling. On the logs they refer to by their badge numbers. Sean Fletcher is 016 and Shane Kisling |
2:03.8 | is 06. Both officers worked in overnight shift. They started at 8 p.m. and got off at 6 a.m. |
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