Burglary interrupted at east 5th street, Tucson AZ
Heads up: This post was detected from real-time dispatch audio. Information may be incomplete, and the situation may evolve. Always verify using official agency releases.
According to the dispatch call, a homeless male attempted to break into a building near East 5th Street in Tucson. Security inside the building was unarmed. The male suspect wore a gray hoodie and blue jeans. He stopped trying to enter and remained nearby.
Audio|Heard on: Tucson Police Dispatch
Listen to dispatch call
02:7
Transcript:
00:00
Anyone cleared for level 2[1] burglar interrupted near East 5th St.
00:05
Call says that a homeless male tried to break in.
00:11
Click their 5 is at 56.
00:18
Select call is now of level 1[2].
00:25
That changed was that someone was neased earlier? It's not clear if it was the caller or the suspect.
00:35
Cabby? We don't have to tone up.
00:42
10-4[3]. We callers out saying that that the male suspect is received in a lead.
00:51
6 use in the last.
00:58
Near East 5th St.
01:01
The male wearing a gray hoodie, blue jeans.
01:04
The caller's security currently inside the building, he is not armed.
01:08
I'm sorry, the next mail wall.
01:14
Sixth Albion railway route from Glendie Country Club.
01:21
139.
01:26
And that's up level 1[2] of 13.
01:36
Front 92 to 62 you can go for him.
01:47
531.41.
01:53
For 535 to East, the male suspect is no longer trying to get in and the LAS updates is that he's on the fifth street side, college and await inside.
02:04
Really,
02:07
good special.
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
level 2: Elevated-priority response requiring timely police action, but lower urgency than highest-level emergencies.
[2]
level 1: Initial or high-priority response level or staging designation, context-dependent.
[3]
10-4: Acknowledgment or affirmative—message received, understood, or OK.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Not all dispatch calls become confirmed incidents. This reflects early radio traffic only. Treat with caution.
