Crime & Safety
Sunday is Amber Alert Day in Washington
It only takes a few minutes to go to www.amberalert.com and register to receive AMBER Alerts.

The following is a news release from the Washington State Patrol.
(Olympia)βGovernor Chris Gregoire has declared Sunday as AMBER Alert Day, and the Washington State Patrol is urging everyone to honor the day by getting ready to do their part if an abduction occurs.
It only takes a few minutes to go toΒ www.amberalert.comΒ and register to receive AMBER Alerts. Alerts can be directed to an e-mail account or mobile phone for immediate delivery.
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βWhen a child is abducted every second countsβ WSP Chief John R. Batiste said. βThorough information on the victim and suspect, relayed to the public, gives law enforcement a valuable tool in locating the victim quickly and safely.β
The key to successfully recovering an abducted child is having everyone in the community looking for the child and the vehicle used in the abduction.
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AMBER Alerts are also broadcast via the media, on variable message signs belonging to the Washington State Department of Transportation and through the stateβs Emergency Alert System.Β
Criteria for issuing an AMBER Alert are very specific, to ensure that messages donβt become so routine that they are ignored. Gordon stressed that if you sign up to receive AMBER Alerts your inbox wonβt be filled with unrelated e-mails, or spam.
βLaw enforcement agencies know that the AMBER Alert system will suffer if inappropriate or unnecessary alerts are sent,β State AMBER Alert Manager CarriΒ Gordon said. βThe objective criteria we use mean that AMBER Alerts are only sent in cases where the public can really help.β
The official criteria for an AMBER Alert are:
1.Β Β TheΒ child is under eighteenΒ (18)Β yearsΒ ofΒ age,Β isΒ knownΒ to be abducted, and is not aΒ runawayΒ orΒ throwΒ awayΒ fromΒ home.
2.Β Β TheΒ abductedΒ child is believedΒ to beΒ in dangerΒ of deathΒ orΒ seriousΒ bodily injury.
3.Β Β TheΒ AMBERΒ AlertΒ activation should occurΒ within fourΒ hoursΒ ofΒ theΒ event qualifyingΒ underΒ theΒ criteriaΒ as anΒ AMBERΒ Alert, unlessΒ circumstancesΒ orΒ the timelinessΒ ofΒ theΒ informationΒ warrantΒ otherwise.
4.Β Β ThereΒ mustΒ beΒ enoughΒ descriptive information availableΒ to believeΒ thatΒ an AMBERΒ Alert activationΒ will assistΒ inΒ theΒ recoveryΒ ofΒ theΒ child.Β Β
5.Β Β TheΒ incidentΒ mustΒ beΒ reportedΒ toΒ and investigatedΒ byΒ a lawΒ enforcement agency.
What do you do if you see the suspect vehicle in an abduction?
βCall 9-1-1 right away,β Gordon said. βPlease donβt try to recover the child yourself. The best thing you can do is be a good witness. Let law enforcement professionals make contact with an abductor who is holding a child.β
The State also has an Endangered Missing Person Advisory plan for use when children or adults go missing under circumstances that donβt qualify for an AMBER Alert. And a Blue Alert Plan, approved by the 2012 legislature, is in the final stages of development. Blue Alerts are intended to enlist the publicβs help in spotting someone who has assaulted or killed a law enforcement officer.Β
More information on AMBER Alerts can be found on the State Patrol web site atΒ http://www.wsp.wa.gov/crime/amber.htm.
More information on Endangered Missing Person Advisories can be found on the State Patrol website atΒ http://www.wsp.wa.gov/crime/docs/amber/endangered_missing_person_advisory_plan.pdf.
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