Officers respond to suspected break-in near Euclid and 10th, Tucson AZ
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This is not an official report. The headline and summary are generated by automated AI systems from public-safety dispatch audio. Always verify with official sources.
As discussed during the dispatch call, police responded to reports of a possible break-in at a row-house unit near East 10th Street and North Euclid Avenue in Tucson. After investigation, officers determined the individual involved was a resident's roommate who had been locked out and was attempting to enter the home.
Audio|Heard on: Tucson Police West Division
Listen to dispatch call
03:54
Transcript:
00:00
District 33, you can show me 23 to the west on turn.
00:07
District 31 to 33,
00:09
I'm approaching from Euclid here.
00:12
It says it is the back patio, so I'm not going to assume that's the north.
00:15
I'm going to hit the alley.
00:20
Copy.
00:26
All right, then.
00:31
Three six three four, I'm set up at Ferris nine.
00:39
Three two to three three three, it's this little group of row houses, correct?
00:46
District 33, 10-4[1].
00:47
I'm on the southwest side.
00:51
There's a driveway here that leads to the back.
00:53
I just need a unit on Euclid Avenue and East 10th Street, and I think we might have this whole thing cornered off.
01:01
Well, we need to know which unit it is because there's multiples here and I'm on the back side so you can eyes on it.
01:06
I haven't seen or heard anything yet.
01:12
Go ahead and talk.
01:16
Three, three, two.
01:18
It's going to be a middle unit.
01:21
4th door from the west side.
01:29
Copy. I'll take the next unit to me if you want to take two up there and we'll take two back here and go from there.
01:38
Three, four, three.
01:39
I believe I'm the one that just set off west of you.
01:47
A quarter in the back parking lot on Euclid.
01:51
Hang on, 13.
01:56
Two of them, five to three, two.
02:01
I'll be there shortly.
02:02
Two hundred and fifty-two to 500 and fifty-five.
02:03
You actually want to link up to 300 and twenty-two? I met them for the residence.
02:08
Yeah, thanks a lot.
02:14
District 300 and thirty-three.
02:15
I am with the comp right now.
02:17
He's saying that she's on the phone with the resident, and he's saying that it might be his roommate who got walked out and was trying to get into their house.
02:27
We're confirming that right in town.
02:33
Three two to three three, copy that.
02:35
We'll check the back here, make sure there wasn't any forced entry or anything, and if so we can just maintain it.
02:45
Three two to three three three, it looks like somebody peeked out the back from the 4th unit, but it doesn't look like it's forced.
03:02
District 33, copy.
03:03
I just got off the phone with the resident.
03:05
He confirmed that it is his roommate inside.
03:08
He's calling him by phone right now and having them walk out the front door.
03:11
I have three extra units here with me.
03:16
And four, we'll just hold here until you get that verified.
03:23
District 33 to 32?
03:27
What?
03:31
The door that you see with possible damage,
03:36
can you tell me?
03:38
That's the 4th door from the west side, right?
03:45
So I don't see any damage.
03:47
I said negative on forced entry back here.
03:52
Copy, 10-4[1].
03:53
This is all for 4, we'll confirm.
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
10-4: Acknowledgment or affirmative—message received, understood, or OK.
Disclaimer:
This transcript is automatically generated by AI from live dispatch audio. Dispatch communications may include background noise, overlapping speakers, or rapidly evolving situations, and automated transcription may not capture all details or context.
Note:
Auto-generated from live dispatch audio, which may contain errors. Dispatch calls are not confirmed incidents. Always verify with official sources.
