“The message was not overtly threatening,” a police spokesman stated.
Russel Neiss with Muckrock was inquisitive about what prompted Collins to truly name 911 over chalk, so he filed a Maine Freedom of Entry Act data request, asking for the 911 recording. The response is as ridiculous as that 911 name will need to have been.
Within the course of, we study that whereas Collins did name police, she didn’t use the emergency 911 line. So there’s that.
“For the reason that ‘cellphone name’ associated to this matter didn’t go to a ‘public security answering level’ aka 911 name middle, we are able to neither present a duplicate, or written transcript of it. Doing so would represent an ‘unwarranted’ invasion of private privateness, Title 16 Sec 804-3,” Sergeant Wade Betters, Public Data Officer for Bangor Police Division, knowledgeable Neiss.
No, I don’t perceive using citation marks there, both.
That basically makes you wish to hear the decision although, proper? I imply, if the Bangor Police Division is working so onerous to guard her “private privateness” it’s bought to be embarrassing. Or it might be if it wasn’t Collins. She’s clearly not able to experiencing that response.