How to Master Law Enforcement Report Writing

The secret to report writing is a straight-forward style that accurately communicates the important points in a logical sequence.

Whenever anyone talks about report writing, images of my academy class and the boring report writing segment always comes to mind. What I didn’t know then, but know now, is just how important report writing really is.

We tend to write police reports for economy. “Detailed yet concise” becomes the battle cry for supervisors and at the same time creates a nexus for officers. In reality, we write quickly so we can get to the next call, only to write again. It’s a convoluted method that demands a great deal but also tends to ignore some of the more technical aspects of writing. There is a middle ground, however, where technical writing and economy can meet to serve the greater good.

Experienced instructors know they can’t teach report writing. By the time people come into law enforcement, they either know how to write or they don’t. You can’t cram 12 years of school into a 40-hour block of instruction no matter how good you are. But what instructors can teach is a particular style of writing.

Style becomes the structure that helps form a quality report. If you focus elsewhere, and replace it with something more restrictive like an outline, then you miss the point altogether. For example, an outline is too rigid. It restricts your ability to maneuver. Combining elements or sections becomes more difficult. If you have ever worked a busy shift where your reports start to stack up, you understand the need to write in as tight a package as possible.

The problem is it’s very hard to write concisely. Thomas Jefferson allegedly wrote a friend once and advised he was sorry for the length of his letter, as he did not have time to write a short one. You no doubt know this to be true from experience. We therefore have to strike a balance between writing a novel like “War and Peace” and Dave Smith persona Buck Savage’s infamous short report “Saw drunk, arrested same.”

Apply the Journalistic Approach

We write to inform, not to impress. The first step involves using the journalistic approach. You need to answer who, what, when, where, why and how. It sounds counterintuitive, but it’s where police officers fail the most. And it’s not because we don’t have the information but because we haven’t organized the information we do have to our advantage.

A highly effective report writing structure goes like this: how the officer got the call, what the complainant/witness/victim said, what the officer observed, and what the officer did. Adhering to this structure allows any first responder to tackle any initial investigation with ease.

Explain How You Got the Call

We take for granted the numbers of ways we can get a call for service. We can be dispatched or flagged down. It can be a walk-up, or a follow-up. It’s important to state how you got the call even if the investigation proves it to be something else. If it’s in progress, you would put that information here as well, up until the situation was under control. Once calmed down, you go on to the next section. For example, if you drive up to find two males fighting, you can’t begin your interviews until they get separated, calmed down and checked for injuries.

Summarize What They Said

The next portion involves interviewing any witnesses, victims, complainants, and possible suspects. You summarize and paraphrase each of their testimonies. You should use quotes when they directly apply to the crime or violation. Don’t be shy about vulgar language either. If they said it, you can quote it. You are just documenting their version and not necessarily what actually happened.

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