Social:Tactical designator

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Short description: Tactical coding used by US police to identify important individuals


Police units in the United States tend to use a tactical designator (or tactical callsign) consisting of a letter of the police radio alphabet followed by one or two numbers. For example, "Mary One" might identify the head of a city's homicide division. Police and fire department radio systems are assigned official callsigns, however. Examples are KQY672 and KYX556. The official headquarters callsigns are usually announced at least hourly, and more frequently by Morse code.

The United States Army uses tactical designators that change daily. They normally consist of letter-number-letter prefixes identifying a unit, followed by a number-number suffix identifying the role of the person using the callsign.

See also

  • Brevity code
  • Call sign
  • Glossary of military abbreviations
  • List of aviation, avionics, aerospace and aeronautical abbreviations
  • List of aviation mnemonics
  • List of government and military acronyms
  • ITU prefix
  • NATO phonetic alphabet
  • Pan-pan
  • Procedure word
  • Pseudonym

References