So we got conflicting stories then.
While I'm sure Public Safety Director Martin Flask is up to date on everything that happens on that street, I'm guessing the neighbors know even more.
You haven't dealt with too many civilian witnesses, especially in neighborhood dispute type cases, have you? As for the public safety director, I'm assuming he is just reading the prior incident report or whatever the cops kept a record of.
Yes, I have. In fact, nearly all of the witnesses I deal with are civilians. I'm a civil attorney. And sometimes I represent a homeowner against his neighbor, or someone who lives a few doors down.
You haven't had to deal with too many domestic dispute phone calls, have you? Because generally when you call in a domestic dispute on your neighbor, he's not a good friend of yours. And you don't go out and look at the house number before you do it. You call and say "I'm at 4005 Hickory Street and my neighbor three doors down has a crying naked woman in the back yard" and the police say "Which address" and you say "three doors down. I'll show you when you get there" Thereafter, the police will put the address into the file, and it will often be cross-referenced with the 911 call in the computer system. However, in a busy jurisdiction, it often won't be. Which means that when searching for "4011 Hickory Street" if you only look through the computer system for
dispatches, you won't find the one where the police came out and were sent to the address by the person who called. The police were
dispatched to 4005 Hickory Street.