POLICE Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

A Report-Writing Refresher

Clear, accurate, and thorough reports are the mark of a true law enforcement professional.

Let’s start by defining a “professional police report” as, “An investigative process that documents the scene as a public, historical record, accurately describes the facts, identifies evidence and the actual or suspected participants and their statements and actions, supports prosecution, limits liability, and demonstrates police professionalism.”

Police reports have legal, historical, and statistical value. They help law enforcement agencies prove or disprove what happened at a specific time and place. They make it easier for chiefs, sheriff’s, elected officials, and federal, state, and local public and criminal justice administrators to make decisions about staffing, hiring, and protection and service to the community.

Ad Loading...

Writing a false, inaccurate, incomplete police report is unprofessional and unethical. Filing one can be grounds for dismissal or prosecution.

Understand that the chain of command for your police report—both sworn and non-sworn—could go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. Nearly as many civilians will read your report as other cops, investigators, or prosecutors.

Professional police reports demonstrate your knowledge of the law, probable cause, the various codes, your agency P&Ps, how evidence is collected, and how crimes, incidents, and accidents should be investigated, documented, and/or prosecuted.

Your reports are used to defend your actions regarding detentions, arrests, and use of non-deadly and deadly force. You must be able to explain, accurately and truthfully, and within the law and your agency policy, why you took the actions you did.

Be as detailed as possible when writing your justifications for your use of force; your steps from consensual conversation to under arrest; and your searches and seizures. These are most often where your court cases are won or lost. 

Ad Loading...

Use the Triple-A Rule to improve your reports.

1.  Keep your Average Sentence Length to About 15 to 20 Words. Longer or shorter is OK, but this word number guideline always leads to the highest comprehension by the reader. It’s easy to stay at this 15 to 20 words per sentence mark if you stick to one idea or activity per sentence.

2.  Avoid Jargon. Write like you talk and don’t talk like a cop on paper. It’s not a vehicle; it’s a car. Stop writing “I engaged in a foot pursuit with the suspect through the canyon” when “I chased the suspect through the canyon” is easier to read. Stop writing “approximately” and just say “about.” Don’t say “I utilized my TASER” when “I used my TASER” is much better.

3.  Write in the Active Voice. Don’t write, “The car was searched and a loaded gun was found under the passenger seat by me.” Write this: “I searched the car and found a loaded Glock pistol under the passenger seat.” Active voice sentences have more power and tend to be shorter.

Memorize the correct version of these common grammar usage errors and keep them out of your reports: their, they’re, or there; you’re or your; then or than; it’s or its; to or too; further or farther.

Ad Loading...

If your field notes are an inaccurate mess, fix that immediately. See how other officers create well-organized field notes and copy their approach.

Develop short cuts for field notetaking: V for victim, W for witness, S for Suspect, M for me (you said it, asked it, or did it), P for partner.

Little details can have a lot of importance. People involved in police reports may try to claim things later that didn’t happen, get payment for damage that wasn’t there, or file questionable or even false court or insurance claims. Get the name of the doctor at the ER, the nurse who did the blood draw, the name of the tow truck driver, the weather and lighting conditions at an accident scene. Get serial numbers for stolen equipment. Quote exactly how someone refused medical treatment at the scene. Describe specifically where a vehicle was damaged; don’t just write “front bumper dent.”

If not tape recorded or on your body camera footage, immediately note all spontaneous statements made by suspects (pre-Miranda), accurately and word for word.

All parts of your report are important but two subheadings: Origin (how you arrived on the scene) and Background (this event has happened before, with these victims, witnesses, or suspects) can really help report readers recognize the context of the situation.

Ad Loading...

Know when to ask more open-ended questions (used to get the person to tell his or her story) and fewer closed-ended questions (used to get yes/no answers). “And then what happened?” is an open-ended question. “Is that all you can remember about the event?” is a closed-ended question. Both are necessary, but you’ll get more information using open-ended questions.

If you routinely forget to ask for certain information on a specific field report, create a pocket-sized cheat sheet reminder card for each report and refer to it before you release the participants and clear the scene. This is especially important for reports you may rarely write: forgery/fraud cases, elder abuse, death calls, missing persons, runaway juveniles.

Know the elements of the crime and make certain those are described as being met by the suspect’s actions in your report. Crimes require intent on the part of the doer. Some events are not crimes: a watch that gets left in the bathroom at a restaurant and is not there when the owner returns is not a theft case.

Know the important difference between an eyewitness and an “ear witness.” Some people saw things; other people heard about things from others. It’s a critical distinction in your investigation and subsequent reports.

An important investigative step in burglary and robbery investigations is the neighborhood canvass. Adding this critical process to your reports adds to your professionalism, as defined by the other officers and investigators it helps. It’s part of your job as a patrol officer to make it easier for your detectives to do their follow-ups.

Ad Loading...

Depending on where you work, you could spend nearly half the hours in your career writing reports. The stakes are high for poorly written police reports. The rewards for writing truly professional police reports are just as high. Choose your words well. 

Steve Albrecht worked for the San Diego Police Department for 15 years. "His new book, "The Police Professional: 60 Ways to Lead," co-authored with Captain Andy Borrello (ret.), is available on Amazon Kindle. He can be reached at www.DrSteveAlbrecht.com

Ad Loading...
Subscribe to our newsletter

More Patrol

Thumbnail image for video series POLICE From the Show Floor featuring Polaris Government & Defense.
Patrolby Wayne ParhamNovember 19, 2025

From the Show Floor: Polaris Government & Defense

Learn about Polaris Government & Defense in this video as POLICE visits their show booth to discover their side-by-sides and the advantages they provide for agencies.

Read More →
black background width image of police lights in middle and headline Dashcam Video Officers rescue Man from Burning Car
PatrolNovember 17, 2025

Dashcam Video Shows Officers Rescue Man from Burning Car

Dashcam video released by a New Jersey police department shows two of its officers rescuing an unconscious man from a burning car after a crash.

Read More →
blue background with image of a red dot sight and also second image of the red dot on a handgun lower right
PatrolNovember 17, 2025

Aimpoint COA optic + A-CUT Named Red Dot of the Year

The Aimpoint COA optic + A-CUT system has been named Red Dot of the Year by Guns & Ammo magazine. The new optic system was introduced in January 2025.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Thumbnail for video series POLICE From the Show Floor, with headline text featuring Axon
Patrolby Wayne ParhamNovember 16, 2025

From the Show Floor: Axon

Join POLICE as we visit with Abi Stock, of Axon, to learn about the company’s latest technology offerings, such as Axon Assistant, Form One, and the DFR integration with Skydio.

Read More →
side view of a ballistic helmet in studio setting, black background, with sparks and smoke
PatrolNovember 16, 2025

Back Face Deformation, Brain Injury and Ballistic Helmets – Why the “Dent Doesn’t Matter” Claim Ignores Science

Alex Poythress, co-founder and CEO of Ballistic Armor Co., explains why ballistic helmet buyers should insist on full test data, including BFD measurements, standoff distance, and padding configuration, rather than rely solely on penetration ratings.

Read More →
Pink Streamlight Wedge XT flashlight.
PatrolNovember 13, 2025

Streamlight Marks 15 Years of Support for Breast Cancer Research Foundation With $20k Donation

In its 15th year of supporting the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, Streamlight donated $20,000 to help in the fight against cancer. Donations were generated through the sale of special Wedge XT models and other pink flashlights.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
center circle image of PTSD Help Expanded surrounded by military and first responder images
PatrolNovember 11, 2025

Police-Led Mental Health Charity Expands to Include Veterans

Talk To Me Post Tour (TTMPT), a non-profit organization that has been providing peer-support programs and professional psychological support for first responders, is now expanding services to military veterans.

Read More →
police officer holding a folded flag and headline for Officer Killed
PatrolNovember 10, 2025

WakeMed Campus Police Officer Killed in Hospital Shooting

A WakeMed Campus Police Officer died after being shot in the lobby of the emergency department at a North Carolina hospital over the weekend.

Read More →
Black background with blue graphic outline of state of Florida and headline Video Released: barricaded Suspect Falls Through Ceiling and Into SWAT Custody.
PatrolNovember 10, 2025

Video Shows Barricaded Suspect Fall Through Ceiling and Into SWAT Custody

Deputies in Indian River County, Florida, apprehended a suspect after he fell through the ceiling with SWAT members waiting below. The sheriff’s department released video of the apprehension.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
thumbnail for video series POLICE From the Show Floor featuring T2 Systems.
Patrolby Wayne ParhamNovember 10, 2025

From the Show Floor: T2 Systems

Learn about T2 Systems and its electronic parking enforcement solutions. Retired Chief John Holland outlines the benefits of using such a system to manage parking enforcement.

Read More →