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APCO radiotelephony spelling alphabet

Old word list for law enforcement agencies


Old word list for law enforcement agencies

The APCO phonetic alphabet, a.k.a. LAPD radio alphabet, is the term for an old competing spelling alphabet to the ICAO radiotelephony alphabet, defined by the Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials-International from 1941 to 1974, that is used by the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) and other local and state law enforcement agencies across the state of California and elsewhere in the United States. It is the "over the air" communication used for properly understanding a broadcast of letters in the form of easily understood words. Despite often being called a "phonetic alphabet", it is not a phonetic alphabet for transcribing phonetics.

In 1974, APCO adopted the ICAO Radiotelephony Spelling Alphabet, making the APCO alphabet officially obsolete; however, it is still widely used, and relatively few police departments in the U.S. use the ICAO alphabet.

Development

The APCO first suggested that its Procedure and Signals Committee work out a system for a "standard set of words representing the alphabet should be used by all stations" in its April 1940 newsletter. By this point, APCO President Herb Wareing "came out in favor of a standard list of words for alphabet letters, preferably suitable for both radiophone and radiotelegraph use."

The list was based on the results of questionnaires sent out by the Procedures Committee to all zone and interzone police radio stations. The questionnaire solicited suggestions, but also included the existing Western Union and Bell Telephone word lists, plus another list then in general use by a number of police stations. Lists used by military services were excluded because of a lack of permission to reproduce. The resulting final list differs from the Bell Telephone word list by only five words, and from the Western Union word list by only eight words.

Replacement with international spelling alphabet

In 1974, APCO adopted the ICAO International Radiotelephony Spelling Alphabet, replacing the Adam-Boy-Charlie alphabet APCO first published in 1940. However, most police departments nationwide have kept using the 1940 APCO spelling alphabet, with those using the 1974 APCO spelling alphabet being the exception, rather than the rule. A partial list of police departments using the modern APCO/ICAO spelling alphabet includes:

  • Saint Paul, Minnesota Police Department

LAPD usage history

At some point in the early history of emergency service mobile radio systems, the LAPD adopted the APCO radio spelling alphabet for relaying precise information on individual letters. For example, the license plate "8QXG518" might be read by a civilian as "eight cue ex gee five eighteen" but with accuracy being paramount, the police dispatcher would say "eight queen x-ray george five one eight." Despite the development in 1941 of the Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet and its replacement, circa 1956, by the NATO phonetic alphabet (currently used by all NATO armed forces, civil aviation, amateur radio, telecommunications, and some law enforcement agencies), the LAPD and other law enforcement and emergency service agencies throughout the United States continue to use their traditional system.

APCO's Project 14 updated the definition of Ten-codes, and also adopted the international radiotelephony spelling alphabet for use by law enforcement nationwide.

Comparison of U.S. law enforcement radiotelephony spelling alphabets

The APCO radiotelephony spelling alphabet and its variations represent the letters of the English alphabet using words as follows:

LetterAPCO Procedure Committee 1941APCO Project 2LAPD code wordCHP code wordLVMPD code wordAPCO Project 14 (1974)Present ICAO code wordsABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789.00000
AdamAdamAdamAdamAdamALPHAAlfa
BabeBoxBoyBoyBackBRAVOBravo
CharlesCharlesCharlesCharlesCharlieCHARLIECharlie
DavidDavidDavidDavidDavidDELTADelta
EdwardEdwardEdwardEdwardEasyECHOEcho
FrankFrankFrankFrankFrankFOXTROTFoxtrot
GeorgeGeorgeGeorgeGeorgeGeorgeGOLFGolf
HenryHenryHenryHenryHenryHOTELHotel
IdaIdaIdaIdaIdaINDIAIndia
JohnJohnJohnJohnJohnJULIETTEJuliett
KingKingKingKingKingKILOKilo
LincolnLincolnLincolnLincolnLincolnLIMALima
MaryMaryMaryMaryMaryMIKEMike
Nora (North was the original proposal)NoraNoraNoraNoraNOVEMBERNovember
OceanOceanOceanOceanOceanOSCAROscar
PoppyPoppyPaulPaulPoppyPAPAPapa
QueenQueenQueenQueenQueenQUEBECQuebec
RobertRobertRobertRobertRobertROMEORomeo
SamSamSamSamSamSIERRASierra
TomTomTomTomTomTANGOTango
UnionUnionUnionUnionUnionUNIFORMUniform
VictorVictorVictorVictorVictorVICTORVictor
WilliamWilliamWilliamWilliamWilliamWHISKEYWhiskey
XrayX-rayX-rayX-rayX-rayXRAYX-ray
YoungYoungYoungYellowYellowYANKEEYankee
ZebraZebraZebraZebraZebraZULUZulu
ZERO (with a strong Z and a short RO)ZeroZero
WUN (with a strong W and N)OneWun
TOO (with a strong and long OO)TwoToo
TH-R-EE (with a slightly rolling R and long EE)ThreeTree
FO-WER (with a long O and strong W and final RFourFower
VIE-YIV (with a long I changing to short and strong Y and V)FiveFife
SIKS (with a strong S and KS)SixSix
SEV-VEN (with a strong S and V and well-sounded VEN)SevenSeven
ATE (with a long A and strong T)EightEight
NI-YEN (with a strong N at the beginning, a long I and a well sounded YEN)NinerNiner
Decimal
Hundred
Thousand

There are several local variations of this system in use. The Metropolitan Police Department (Washington DC), uses the APCO alphabet, however the California Highway Patrol, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, San Jose Police Department, San Francisco Police Department, and other agencies across the West Coast and Southwestern United States, use versions that allocate Yellow to "Y" and other agencies' versions allocate Baker or Bravo to "B", or use variations that include Nancy instead of Nora for "N", Easy instead of Edward for "E", or Yesterday for "Y".

With the ultimate goal of clarity, especially in circumstances where signals can be garbled, the use of the word Ocean seems to be advantageous in the radio communication of the letter "O" because it begins with the long, clear vowel "O". The phonetic words Ida and Union feature this same advantage. However, spelling alphabets seem to rarely use initial long vowels. With the exception of Uniform, none of the initial vowels in the NATO alphabet is like this. In an earlier U.S. military alphabet, "A" was indicated by Able, which does start with a long "A", but has since been changed to Alpha (also spelled Alfa, particularly outside the English-speaking countries). In like manner, for clarity, the use of "niner" instead of "nine" for the numeral 9 prevents confusion with the numeral 5, which can sound similar, especially when communications are garbled.

Notes

References

  • {{cite web|url=https://lacdcs.org/members-only/policies/apco-phonetics/

References

  1. (1968). "Public Safety Communications Standard Operating Procedure Manual, (APCO Project Two, 1967)". U.s.govt.printing Office.
  2. "The APCO Bulletin (April, 1940)".
  3. "Backscatter Journal".
  4. "Page Sixteen, The APCO Bulletin April 1940".
  5. "New Word List for CW and Phone".
  6. "Saint Paul Police Department Manual, Section 441.04 Radio Procedures".
  7. "APCO Projects".
  8. (1968). "A NATIONAL TRAINING MANUAL AND PROCEDURAL GUIDE FOR POLICE AND PUBLIC SAFETY RADIO COMMUNICATIONS PERSONNEL". U.s.govt.printing Office.
  9. "LAPD Manual Volume 4 Line Procedures".
  10. "CHP Pursue Your Future".
  11. "Code Card".
  12. "APCO Project 14 report, exhibit No. 8, International Phonetic Alphabet".
  13. "Annex 10 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation: Aeronauticatl Telecommunications; Volume II Communication Procedures including those with PANS status".
  14. "Send Code Word Ideas".
  15. "Phonetic Alphabet".
  16. "APCO Phonetic Alphabet Translator ― LingoJam".
  17. "LAPD Phonetic Alphabet / APCO Phonetic Alphabet in Alphabetical Order".
  18. LAPD Academy 2015
  19. Metropolitan Police Department Form 234, "Radio Transmission and the Standard Phonetic Alphabet".
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