This term can refer to a journal kept in each police precinct listing such daily occurrences as arrests made, complaints received, distressed persons assisted, etc. It can also refer to a summary of major crimes reported in a given area printed in the local newspaper.
Police Blotter - 2005 was released on: USA: 8 March 2005 (Cinequest International Film Festival)
The newspaper that focuses on crimes is typically called a "crime blotter" or "police blotter." These sections in newspapers list recent crime incidents reported by law enforcement agencies in a specific area.
Police blotters can be read from just about any government regulated web page. They are used to monitor activities and to see what is happening in cities.
A police "blotter" (an expression not much used any longer in the US) is a reference to the police station's daily record of police reports and activities. It is a slang expression that encompasses, and refers loosely to, all the journals ledgers, arrest records, and associated paperwork generated during a tour of duty. These become the ongoing official record of activites and occurrences occurring during a 24 hour period, 24/7/365.
your local police department website, go to booking blotter, n say hi if you see me on there
none of them have the blotter, you get it when you unfreeze fregly
Blotter paper is soaked in a liquid solution of a compound, then allowed to dry out.
Sand sprinkled on a freshly written page was used as ink blotter.
The Writing on the Blotter - 1911 was released on: USA: 3 March 1911
The cast of The Brand Blotter - 1920 includes: Hoot Gibson
a blotter is the thing you stamp it with . Like a stamp. Its what fregly gives Short answer the troll thing!
Robert L. Pike has written: 'Bullitt (NFT/BFI Film Classics)' 'Deadline 2 a.m' -- subject(s): Fiction, Fiction in English, Police 'Bullitt' 'Bullitt' 'The gremlin's grampa' -- subject(s): Fiction, Police 'Police blotter'