West Virginia Code of State Rules
Agency 149 - Crime, Delinquency And Correction
Title 149 - LEGISLATIVE RULE GOVERNOR'S COMMITTEE ON CRIME, DELINQUENCY AND CORRECTION
Series 149-03 - Protocol For Law Enforcement Response to Domestic Violence
Section 149-3-6 - Dispatcher/Telecommunicator Responsibilities
Current through Register Vol. XLI, No. 38, September 20, 2024
6.1. Dispatchers/Telecommunicators who provide service to police department and communications and emergency operations centers which dispatch the law enforcement officer shall dispatch domestic violence calls in the same manner as any other call for police assistance, in accordance with the priority criteria prescribed by generally applicable department procedures. Whenever possible, the dispatcher/telecommunicator should assign a back-up unit.
6.2. The dispatcher/telecommunicator receiving a domestic violence call shall attempt to elicit from the caller, and be able to communicate to the responding law enforcement officer, as much of the following information, in the following order of importance, as time and exigencies of the reported incident allow:
6.3. If the caller is the victim, or if the caller is a witness to a domestic violence incident in progress, the dispatcher/telecommunicator shall attempt to keep the caller on the telephone and relay ongoing information provided by the caller to the responding law enforcement officer and EMS if dispatched. The dispatcher/telecommunicator shall tell the caller that help is on the way and when the police may arrive.
6.4. If the dispatcher/telecommunicator has ready access to police department records, all information relevant to the situation shall be relayed to the officer. At the direction of the law enforcement officer the dispatcher/telecommunicator shall access the Domestic Violence Database, National Crime Information Center (NCIC), and other criminal information databases to determine whether the parties involved in the incident have been involved previously in domestic violence incidents or whether there is a protective order involving the parties in effect, and relay that information to the responding law enforcement officer.
6.5. If the dispatcher/telecommunicator has reason to believe that the accused is on bond for a crime against a family or household member, including a family or household members who are children, and if the dispatcher/telecommunicator has ready access to magistrate court records that show whether there are conditions of bond, the dispatcher/telecommunicator should consult the records and communicate any relevant information to the responding law enforcement officer; including the existence of a protective order prohibiting the possession of firearms.