| incident |
A specific criminal act involving one or more victims and offenders. For example, if two people are robbed at the same time and place, this is classified as two robbery victimizations but only one robbery incident.
Ãâó: www.albany.edu/sourcebook/app8.html
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| incident command system |
The ICS (Incident Command System) is a long proven system of handling field response activities in emergencies. It provides essential management using these aspects: common terminology, modular organization, integrated communications, a unified command structure, consolidated action plans, manageable span-of-control, predesigned incident facilities and comprehensive resource management. It does all of this by organizing any emergency response effort into five basic functions: 1. command 2. ...
Ãâó: acs.oes.ca.gov/Pages/acs_definitions.html
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| incident |
"something unusual, serious, or violent that happens" [Longman] "an event or occurrence, especially a minor one" [Oxford] "a group of attacks that can be distinguished from other attacks because of the distinctiveness of the attackers, attacks, objectives, sites and timing" [Sandia]
Ãâó: www.terena.nl/tech/task-forces/tf-csirt/iodef/docs...
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| incident |
any occurrence or series of occurrences having the same origin that results in the discharge or substantial threat of the discharge of oil. An oil or gas condensate spill or blowout form a single well, platform, or pipeline resulting from any equipment failure, human action, or weather condition.
Ãâó: www.gomr.mms.gov/homepg/lsesale/definitions.html
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| incident |
Describes the type of action responded to, or undertaken, by police officers and recorded in COPS; for example, robbery, assault, visit to licensed premises.
Ãâó: www.audit.nsw.gov.au/perfaud-rep/Year-1999-2000/po...
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