All tips should be verified by some type of independent police corroboration. You don't want to take any tip from a non-law enforcement source and consider it gospel. Such corroboration serves at least two important functions. First, it helps add to the reliability of the tip and confirms the accuracy of the informant's information. Second, it will help make up for any deficiencies in the informant's information. Independent police corroboration helps complete the totality of circumstance equation.
The type of tip that requires the most independent police corroboration is the anonymous tip. All of the traditional indicators of reliability are lacking in a tip provided by an anonymous source. Verifying the reliability of an anonymous tip involves two steps: detail development and independent verification.
The first step, detail development, is in the hands of the call taker. To establish what the informer's basis of knowledge is, the call taker must obtain as much information as possible from the informant. How does the informant have knowledge of the criminal activity? Was it observed personally or is this secondhand information? From what distance is the informant observing the action? How long ago did this event occur? How often does this event occur? What specifically is the informant observing?
This last question is important. Don't let the informant draw legal conclusions such as, "I am observing a robbery." Non-police personnel lack the legal sophistication to accurately draw such conclusions. Instead, have the informant describe actions he or she is observing such as, "A male is pinning another male to a car and holding a knife to his neck."
Specifics about the criminal actor and victim should also be obtained, of course. Only after these general questions have been exhausted should the call taker begin to ask some "hot questions," questions likely to draw a dial tone as a response.