Police Correspondenc E: The Writing of Memoranda, Police Reports, and Civilian Letters
Police Correspondenc E: The Writing of Memoranda, Police Reports, and Civilian Letters
Police Correspondenc E: The Writing of Memoranda, Police Reports, and Civilian Letters
CORRESPONDENC
E
the writing of memoranda,
police reports, and
civilian letters.
CHARACTERISTICS OF
EFFECTIVE POLICE
CORRESPONDENCE
1. Correctness. No error, fault, mistake, or
departure from truth. In order to avoid
error which may be inadvertently done in
spelling, punctuation, price, specification,
sentence structure and grammar among
others, the correspondence should be
thoroughly edited.
2a)
AVOID REDUNDANCIES OR
SUPERFLUOUS WORDS
true facts
for recreation purposes
whether or not
general consensus
a total of 42
joined together
strangled to death
controversial issue
future plans
completely eliminated
submitted hereunder
my personal opinion
in the event that
new innovation
in the event of
hold in abeyance
a large number
definite decision
never before in the past
new recruits
past experience
reason why
qualified expert
enclosed hereto/herewith
arrive at an agreement
live gregariously.
Too great a number of culinary
Examples:
meet our Creator (dying)
policy of disinformation (lying to the
public)
conflicts and collateral damage ( wars
and civilian casualties)
downsized workers (laid-off workers)
2e)Avoid
weak
phrases
Weak
Better
wealthy business person
tycoon
boom
carrying a child
pregnant
long years
years
business prosperity
Specific
traveled in
Japan
one kilogram
of rice
visit Batangas
my husband;
my wife
3. Completeness
This means perfection, fullness or
sufficiency of the correspondence as
regards to information and parts. Check
the document if it caries all the
necessary messages intended to be
transmitted. This prevents possible
clarification calls or replies that may only
delay transactions including desired
actions to messages.
4. Courtesy
This is akin to acts or expressions
that
manifest
politeness,
civility,
affability, urbanity, considerateness and
respectfulness.
Expressions like
please, kindly, thank you so much, we
are glad, we appreciate in both oral and
written
communication
promote
goodwill.
6. Tonal appeal.
Statements may exude tense, hostility,
artificiality,
friendliness,
naturalness or
sincerity of the communicator. In several
communication situations,
there are no
substitutes for simplicity, straight, forward,
modern and readers words and phrases.
Hence we should organize a letter sounding
like we are talking personally to our reader.
7. ACCURACY
About Genderism
Modern writing requires us to refrain from
using terms that discriminate or show biases in
the treatment of males and females. Neutral
terms should be used to manifest, fairness and
equality between sexes.
Bias
if a woman drives
businessman
man-made
manpower
chairman
salesman
foreman
Fair
if a person drives
businessperson
artificial; synthetic;
human power ; workforce
chairperson
salesperson; sales clerk
construction supervisor
MEMORANDUM
It is a note, a reminder, or a statement that one
TONES OF MEMORANDUM
1. MEMORANDUM FOR is used by a
subordinate official in communicating to a
superior on matters which are
recommendatory/advisory or informative in
nature, briefings, or reports.
The tone of the memorandum from a
subordinate office must be formal.
2. Officials of equal positions shall use
MEMORANDUM FOR in inter-office
communications but the tone may be
personal.
GUIDELINES: MEMORANDUM
In order to conform with the civilian character of the
PNP, BJMP, and BFP the subject-to-letter format
which is the standard military type of communication
should not be used anymore in all correspondence
and instead be replaced with the Memorandum
format which is the standard and acceptable type
among civilian offices.
As per Letter Directive No. 95-09-26 DHRDD,PNP-
MEMORANDUM
08-47
To
:
From :
Subject:
Date :
_____________________________________________________
1. References:
a. Memo from TCDS dated August 28, 2005.Subject:Formats;
b.
2. Body
3.
Conclusion
Signature
LORENZO D BRAA
Jail Senior Inspector
MEMORANDUM
08-47
FOR
: Name and Title
FROM : Your title
SUBJECT: GUIDELINES FOR FORMATTING MEMOS
DATE
: Serves as a chronological record for future reference
1.. References:
a. Memo from TCDS dated August 28, 2005.Subject:Formats;
b.
2. Body
3. Conclusion
Signature
LORENZO D BRAA
Jail Officer 1
Distribution:
GUIDELINES IN MEMORANDUM
FORMATTING
Subject Line
Body
Signature Block
The signature appears above the printed name at the
signature block below, not after the line or sender line
above. A signature authenticates, corroborates,
confirms, attests or certifies the correctness,
truthfulness or veracity of the content of the instrument by
which the signature is affixed. A signature likewise
carries responsibility or accountability over the statement
or information indicated before it.
Paragraph Spacing
KINDS OF MEMORANDUMS
1.
Recommendation Memorandums
HOW TO THINK CRITICALLY AS YOU FORMULATE,
EVALUATE, AND REFINE YOUR CONCLUSIONS AND
RECOMMENDATIONS:
Conclusions should be logically derived from accurate
interpretations. Recommendations should propose an
appropriate response to the problem or question.
Express your conclusions and recommendations with
assurance and authority. Be direct and assertive. Let the
reader know where you stand.
If your analysis yields nothing definite, do not force a
simplistic conclusion on your material. Instead, explain
your position. Remember, a wrong recommendation is
far worse than no recommendation at all.
2. Justification Memorandums
As the name implies, it justifies the writers position
on some issue. It is a unique class of recommendation
memo. They are often initiated by the writer rather than
requested by the readers. Justification reports therefore
typically begin rather than end with the request or
recommendation. Such memo answer the key questions
for readers: Why should we?
Typically, it follows a version of this arrangement:
1. State the problem and your recommendations for
solving it.
2. Point out the cost, savings, and benefits of your plan.
3. If needed, explain how your suggestions can be
implemented.
4. Conclude by encouraging the reader to act.
3. Progress report
It serves as a paper trail on a project.
Summarize achievements to date
Describes work remaining, with timetable
Describes the problems encountered
4. Survey Report
CIVILIAN LETTER
Letter refers to a message in writing,
which may be in any language or in a
code, contained in a sealed or unsealed
envelope or not in an envelope at all
intended for delivery to a person or entity
displayed legibly on one of its faces.
PARTS OF A CIVILIAN
LETTER
Heading (Letterhead)
Inside Address
Attention Line
The name mentioned immediately after the attention line is the
final receiver of the letter.
The letter is only coursed through the person mentioned in the
inside address. Coursing the letter to the addressee means that he
is superior to the person mentioned after the attention line;
therefore, as a matter of protocol should know official matters
communicated to his subordinates. Once the inside addressee
received the letter and forwards the same to his subordinate, he
has likely attested, consented or approved the purpose of the
documents.
A letter using an attention line comes from other organization
or outside party not connected with the office of the addressee.
MR. MIKE A. MARIANO
Manager
Best Enterprise
15 Narra St., Commonwealth
1108 Quezon City
Attention:
Reference Initial
Rab05/lmc05
Enclosure
Through Line
Notation Line
POLICE REPORTS
It is a chronological or step-by-step
account of an incident that took place as a
given time.
Paragraphing process:
1st -- what sort of crime is being described
2nd -- the recounting of various steps or
actions done
3rd -- end paragraph which concludes the
report ( Conclusions includes the status of
the case, the disposition of the individuals
involved (hospitalized? Jailed? taken
home?, and the disposition of the evidence
obtained.)
INVESTIGATION REPORT
FORMAL REPORT
They serve as records for administrators in
planning, directing and organizing the unit. It
may also be used as a legal document in the
prosecution of criminals.
Basic Parts of a Formal Report
1. Introduction background statement
Why the report was written?
How the data were gathered?
What does the report includes (scope) and what
is does not include (delimitations)?
What are the materials and instruments used inn
gathering the data?
2.
3.
4.