You certainly have more experience in the field than I.
I am not familiar with any kind of emergency button (seems to be what you're talking about).
I'm referring to the regular old "press right here to talk" button.
If the press right here to talk button should accidentally get pressed (by the officer or perhaps a female companion in close quarters), then an accidental transmission goes out over the airwaves until that button is released, I'm thinking.
That could possibly jam up the channel for some time, blocking anyone else's transmission from being heard, I believe.
Therefore, it makes sense *to me* that the dispatcher could override the accidental open mic (not override some kind of emergency button transmission) to tell the officer to fix his open mic, which occurred because the regular old press right here to talk button is depressed.
That's what I'm saying.
I understand what your saying, and you're correct in how they operate. I'm not saying it can't be done, or that there isn't an agency out there doing it, but there are as many or more reasons not to. Mics usually only accidentally get keyed up on a rare occasion, and usually only for a second or two. The situation you describe is almost unheard of, I dont know of a single incident of it happening. On our system, the radio keying up will also emit a tone so the operator knows he has the air. So an OCPD officer would hear a beep letting him know his transmit button is being pressed, so he would know if he accidentally pressed it. If another officer tries keying up while someone is on the air, they get a denied tone. The system can also be set up so the second officers transmission would be queued up and transmit once the air is clear, but thats not common either. If an officer had an open mic, dispatch would most likely send them a message via CAD that would pop up on his screen. The officer whose transmission is being blocked can also switch to another "channel" (channels arent actually used anymore, everything operates on one frequency) to get his message to dispatch, etc. In the case of an emergency, that officer could press the emergency button, because in addition to what I mentioned earlier, it will override all traffic to give him that 5 seconds of open mic. It's possible thats what the dispatcher in the story did. Emergency button always has priority on the system. I should also mention that everything now is IP based, radios are essentially like cell phones or handheld computers. We control acces, etc via something similar to the same way a company handles pc's on their network, via an active directory type interface. We can disable radios remotely, they must be programmed with a LID (logical identifier), and encryption key for certain talk groups, we can see when they keyed up, for how long, listen to the transmission, email it, allow radios to listen but not transmit, transmit and listen, etc.
ETA a pic of our current radios. We are now adding a second model that is similar in features but smaller and cheaper, but less than 10% of the radios on the system are the new style. The large black button idead center on the side is the PTT button, the two above are directional/multifeature buttons, and the emergency button is the red one on top. The two knobs are volume and channel knobs. We have 16 channels per talkgroup, and can create and run almost unlimited talkgroups. The arrows on the face allow you to select the talkgroup you want, and then the knob allows you to select the "channel". So you can go to OCPD1 talkgroup, and find Bricktown, Santa Fe, Springlake, mutual agencies etc as "channels", or go to OCFD talkgroup and find their "channels" etc
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