Operator or Murderer?

Gretchen 2022-04-22 06:01:01

Minutes decide life and death, and every 911 staff member should be a psychologist and strategist, not a neurotic blues like a female pig. Fraud groups follow the script and follow the tutorials when making calls. 911 should have a thick manual, and try to think of the options as far as possible, including the keyboard space bar, answering and rejecting, etc. should be made into separate buttons or pedals, and the operator can Save time for thinking and operation on small problems and save brain power. It is unreasonable for the operator to lose control after killing someone on the phone. The operator should be more sophisticated and vicious than the murderer. At least the psychology should be relatively strong. The seals have been trained, and it is not easy to collapse after killing people. I believe that the same is true for those with remote control drones. If the 911 call is a suicide or a terrorist, the operator should play the role of a negotiator.

The details are wonderful and may come from real cases.

In the end, the neurotic operator becomes the detective, and the ending is even more bizarre. Sherlock Holmes also ended up above the law in the Devil's Heel case, letting the suspect go, but that's justice, right?

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Extended Reading

The Call quotes

  • [last lines]

    Michael Foster: You're an operator. You can't do this!

    Jordan Turner: It's already done!

  • Brooke: A lot of times you don't know how it ends. When your units get to a scene you sign off and they take over. But, you don't know. Did they make an arrest, shoot the bad guy, did the PR live, did she die...