Section 4 - Report Writing (30 minute Research & Assignment)
Section 4 – Report Writing (30 minute Research & Assignment)
Research:
You currently have a required time of 30 minutes to read and research the information provided. Make sure you take notes of any information you find useful. After the required time has passed, you may continue with the remainder of the course.
Please note, review and research the term Hostile Witness and provide a link of the website in which you read the definition and did your learning about it.
Assignment:
Your assignment is to read the scenario below and provide as much information as possible in identifying each of the 5 W’s.
Scenario: On September 23, 2014, at approximately 3:45 pm, Joe Smith attended the TD Bank located at 56 Jane Street in Toronto. While at the bank, Joe observed a single male enter the bank. The male was wearing dark clothing as well as a hooded jacket to cover his face. The unknown suspect approached the bank teller and demanded she provide him with the money that is in the drawer. The suspect indicated that he had a gun in his possession. Tracy, the bank teller, was cooperative and provided the suspect with a sealed bag with an unknown amount of money. At approximately 3:50 pm, the suspect ran out of the bank. While escaping the bank, the suspect drops his cellular phone on the floor.
Please write the answers to your Research and Assignment in your Learning Journal. These answers will need to be submitted at the end of this course. This assignment should be no longer than a paragraph (maximum 100 words).
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The following information is located on the current PSISB website. Your task is to read through all the following information. It is important that you read this information as it will assist you in passing your final exam, as well as your ministry test.
PSISB website:
Training syllabus for security guards: Section 4: Report writing | Ontario.ca
https://www.ontario.ca/document/training-syllabus-security-guards/section-4-report-writing
Section 4 – Report Writing
Security guards are required to complete written reports of occurrences, duties performed and comprehensive descriptions of their tasks/observances. They should have an understanding of how to write reports that are objective and standardized.
Note-taking
A notebook is arguably a security guards most important tool, it is used on a daily basis to provide an account of the events that unfolded on that day.
A notebook should be kept as neat as possible, be organized chronologically, and should not be tampered with (for example, no pages should be torn out, as it may give the impression that the security guard was trying to remove information). Overall, the accuracy and the transparency of the notebook will reflect the integrity and reliability of the security guard.
It is the security guards responsibility to make sure that their notebook is secure (for example, the guard must not leave a notebook unattended in a place where a member of the public could access it). However, the notebook is ultimately the property of the security guards employer, so entries should be as legible as possible, with an emphasis on accurate spelling of names and locations.
Reports should stick to factual information and observations, rather than opinions and assumptions, and should contain answers to the following questions:
Who? (names of suspects, victims, complainants, witnesses, etc.)
What? (description of what happened, what each person involved did, what evidence is available, etc.)
When? (time, date, sequential account of what happened from start to finish)
Where? (location where the incident took place, where each person involved was situated, where evidence was found, etc.)
Why? (describe the motives for what happened, if they are evident)
How? (how the incident happened, how each person involved was acting, etc.)
Reports as Evidence
Security guards may receive a subpoena and be called upon to testify in court in relation to a situation they dealt with. They may be asked to recall specific details about the situation, so it is imperative for the security guard to keep thorough and accurate notes. When on the witness stand, the security guard may be permitted to refer to his or her notes. However, the notes should serve as a memory aid only: if the notes are clear, they will help the security guard recall details about a situation, but the security guard should not have to read directly from the notes. As such, prior to appearing in court, the guard should carefully review all notes and try to remember as many details about the situation as possible.
Statements
A security guard may on occasion be required to take a statement to secure the information provided by a witness. The key purpose of taking a statement is to ensure an accurate record of the recollection of an event or occurrence by the witness. A statement should be taken freely with no threat or promise made to the witness.
Statement protocols vary from company to company. General good practice is for statements to include the following:
Full name of the witness, date of birth, identification.
Employment of the witness and contact information.
Address of the witness, location of statement.
Date of interview.
Time commenced and concluded.
Name of security guard and company who took the statement.
An introduction paragraph including days events and observations.
Verbatim (word for word) transcription of the witnesses recollection of the events.
Closing paragraph that ends the statement.
For example, the closing statement can read:
I, (witness name), have read the above six-page statement and find it to be accurate to the best of my recollection. I have been advised that I could omit, delete or change any part of the statement prior to signing it.
As this example indicates, the security guard should give the witness the opportunity to review the statement and ask for changes to be made before they agree to sign it. If a change is requested, a line should be drawn through the item being removed, with the initials of both the witness and the security guard at the beginning of the correction and the end.