This is just poor transcription.
The full conversation was as follows:
Officer 1: “I like those big cats.”
Officer 2: “Yeah? Tigers or leopards?”
Officer 1: “Which is spotted?”
I thought it was about gardening
Officer 1: There’s a garden of nightshade
Officer 2: That could be tomatoes or potatoes
Officer 1: Which is potted?
Definitely a crossword.
Officer 1: Thirteen down. Ten letters. Another name for a cauldron. Starts with ‘w’, ends with ‘t’.
Officer 2: That’s a witches’ pot, Ted.
Officer 1: You heard about that massive flying butt plug…
Officer 2: You don’t believe that shi…
Officer 1: Which was spotted.
Hey Coach, did you get wordle today?
Pretty sure it was: Officer 1: arrest that stoner, he pirated Oppenheimer!
Officer 2: I got two guys here chief, both look like the hacker type, using something in their phones called “Lemmee?”
Officer 1: Which is pothead?
I like “witches spotted” much better
At this point if witches started attacking id barely even skim the article before going back to scrolling.
“Good for them”
I live in IN, across the river from KY. This sounds completely on brand.
Do you ever take the time to gaze across the river and feel like you’re looking at a zoo enclosure?
Looking across the river into Kentucky from Indiana, is like being a bonobo in one zoo enclosure looking at the enclosure next to yours’ full of chimpanzees.
I spent time in Evansville, can confirm.
Ah, Henderson. You’ll never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy.
You should be the US’s official cultural and geographical explainer to the dozens of us foreigners that are on the internet these days. I’ve just learnt all I need to know about two places/states in one sentence. To follow the analogy perhaps you should rename the river between the two places “Congo”.
any updates?
Turns out she was a duck, so they let her go.
Who are you, who is so wise in the ways of science?
Unfortunately not. Once I had tuned in they either weren’t talking about it anymore or switched to an encrypted channel. In my mind I’d like to believe it’s the second 'cause some crazy ass bullshit is going down with some witches in Kentucky.
At this link you can try to listen back if you know the time it happened. I love that scanner app. It pulls from Broadcastify.com
13 minutes before the timestamp in the screenshot’s metadata.
Also, autocorrect thought you should look at the tomato in the metadata instead.
Autocorrect was just trying to get you to ketchup.
They burned her.
Perhaps he’s affecting a Cockney accent and saying “Which 'es spott’ed”
The computer just didn’t know what to do with the “innit”
Police scanner app?
I’m gonna assume you’re not from the US given your lemmy instance. In the US most police radios transmit “in the clear”, i.e., not encrypted. As such, anyone can buy a “police scanner”, or a radio on the same band as police/first-responder frequencies.
In the internet age, there’s websites (and apparently apps now too), that physically monitor these radio channels and stream them online. Hence, a “police scanner app”. Hope that helps.
Having typed all that out, the only thing I ask is to let us know where you’re from, please.
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The police very much care, and want to be able to encrypt all their traffic.
It’s open for public transparency, mostly.
And I fully support this. It shouldn’t be encrypted because they’re serving the citizens.
There is an argument to be made that there’s a public security interest to encrypt some traffic, like when they call in someone’s information to run a check on them. And I think that’s a legit concern.
There are some fully encrypted systems (which cops want), and there are some hybrid systems, which are more expensive but would keep transparency in place for the population. Those systems work a variety of ways, such as putting the live comms on a 30-minute delay when there’s a big incident, and fully blocking personal information from citizens.
I think the latter is what they should be using, with very very very specific and clear rules on when they can and cannot encrypt, with regular external audits of the encrypted portion to verify no misuse. But if they won’t go hybrid and submit to inspection, leave it wide open. It’s more important that we have transparency (at this moment in time, due to police behavior), which is a thing I really really hate to say but it’s true…
Normal stuff is in the clear. When they’re going to do a raid or talk about sensitive stuff they do switch to an encrypted method of communication. Nobody is listening to the scanner and getting warned that their drug lab is about to be hit.
Well… Not nobody.
So wait need for speed radio chatter could be something street racers actually had??? I had no idea, I always thought it was kind of silly
Yes, although many departments are switching to encrypted radios. It’s a minor political issue, because it fundamentally means less oversight, but also in the event of a major riot or coordinated civil unrest you also might not want to broadcast patrol routed unencrypted.
One of the Mexican countries
Sooooo, Mexico or New Mexico?
Some time ago some American politician used the phrase unironically. Most speculated they were referring to Latin American countries, but since the politician was a republican and correcting themselves is anathema, we’ll never know.
Anyway, it’s become a favorite of mine to repeat this, tongue in cheek.
You assume correctly, UK. Seems kind of crazy, but the other reply chain explains it.
Yup
What app is this, and do you recommend it?
Scanner Radio Pro. Uses the feeds from broadcastify.com which used to be part of the RadioReference network.
The more things change, right?