Amber / Blue / Silver Alerts
Amber Alert Guidelines
What is the Amber Alert Plan?
The Amber Alert Plan is a cooperative effort between the Indiana radio and television stations and law enforcement agencies. The plan calls for law enforcement agencies to provide radio and television stations with an alert upon the immediate confirmation of a qualifying child abduction. All participating radio stations will break programming to broadcast the alert and subsequent information provided by law enforcement.
What is a “Qualifying Abduction?”
- The child must be under 18 years of age.
- The child must be believed to be abducted, and in danger of serious bodily harm or death.
- There must be enough descriptive information to believe the broadcast will help.
- Request must be recommended by the law enforcement agency of jurisdiction.
How will the radio and television stations obtain the information about child abductions?
When a law enforcement official determines a qualifying abduction has occurred, the communications center of Indiana State Police will be notified and provided with basic facts. ISP will confirm the accuracy of the information and issue an Amber Alert via the State Emergency Alert System (EAS).
Is our station(s) required to broadcast an Amber Alert?
No, but the success of the program depends greatly on the maximum number of people hearing the message and being on the lookout for the abductor. If a child in your community were abducted, you would certainly want the benefit of the Amber Alert Program.
Do broadcasters have immunity in airing an Amber Alert?
YES, engrossed Indiana Senate Bill 203 provides immunity for a broadcaster that participates in the Amber Alert program and broadcasts the Amber Alert notification EXACTLY as received from the Indiana State Police without adlibbing or additional reporting.
When we receive an Amber Alert, what is the procedure?
The Amber Alert will come to your station via your EAS receiver as a CAE (Child Abduction Event). Your receiver may be programmed for automatic interrupt of programming or delay. If delayed, we encourage you to broadcast the alert immediately, without operator intervention, otherwise within a minimum of 15 minutes. Getting the information on the air as soon as possible is the key factor. The most crucial time in abduction is the first one or two hours.
After receiving and broadcasting the initial Amber Alert, what should I do for follow-up?
The Amber Alert will only be sent one time over the EAS system. We ask that for the next two hours you broadcast the information at a minimum of every 30 minutes, then once an hour for the next three hours. This is done by either taping the original message and playing it back, transcribing the information and having your personnel read it over the air, or followed up by your news department. Whatever method you may use, it is important that the information be aired in the early hours of the abduction. After the 5 hour period has ended, the Amber Alert will be completed and any additional coverage will be purely at the stations option as a part of normal news and information programming.
What if my station is unmanned when an Amber Alert is issued?
Since the initial alert will come via an EAS CAE activation, the alert will override your normal programming just like a weather warning would do currently. (This assumes that when you operate unmanned you leave your EAS in auto-override mode). Once the EAS alert terminates it is up to you to decide how to staff your station to start the once-per-half-hour update. Remember, these are not required, just highly recommended.
Once the EAS activation occurs, where do I go to get the necessary information to follow the Amber Alert procedures?
You will have several options of where to get the very specific Amber Alert data. Stations may choose from the following resources.
- Transcribe the information from your EAS receiver. Most receivers store the last message received.
- Go to amberalertindiana.com website. The information will be available in printable form there.
- Your news wire service (AP, Network Indiana, etc.) will be provided with the information directly from the Indiana State Police via email.
- An email will be sent to the designated EAS address at your station directly from ISP.
There are times during the day that we do not have personnel at the station. How can we broadcast an Amber Alert during those times?
Your EAS receiver is programmable to automatically interrupt your on-the-air programming. We suggest you use this process.
What should the station tell a citizen that calls to report the citing of the possible abductor
during an active Amber Alert?
The station should direct the citizen to call: 1-888-58AMBER.
When is an Amber Alert terminated?
An Amber Alert runs for 5 hours from the initial EAS alert. The first few hours are the most crucial. Under normal circumstances, the Amber Alert should be considered complete 5 hours after the initial EAS activation. The two exceptions to this rule would be if the ISP receive enough new or updated information to issue a new EAS activation. The process starts over from that time. The other exception would occur if the State Police were to determine that conditions warranted an early termination, stations would be notified through the previously outlined channels, including an EAS CAE (Child Abduction Event) notification.
When is an Amber Alert Terminated?
- An Amber Alert runs for 5 hours from the initial EAS alert (the first few hours are the most crucial). Under normal circumstances the Amber Alert would be considered completed within 5 hours after the initial EAS activation. There are two exceptions to this rule:
- ISP received enough new or updated information to issue a new EAS activation then the process would begin again.
- The State Police were to determine that conditions warranted an early termination the stations would receive:
- A mass email advising the case has been resolved
- Amber Alert notification would be removed from the state’s Amber Alert website.
STATIONS SHOULD NOT REPORT THE TERMINATION OF AN AMBER ALERT UNTIL NOTIFIED FROM THE INDIANA STATE POLICE.
Silver Alert Guidelines
Broadcasters
Announce Silver Alerts during normal news broadcast or as determined by each media outlet. Accept Regional Silver Alerts
Missing Endangered Adult Defined (Indiana Code 12-7-2-131.3)
This is an individual at least eighteen (18) years of age who is reported missing to a law enforcement agency and is, or is believed to be:
- a temporary or permanent resident of Indiana;
- at a location that cannot be determined by an individual familiar with the missing individual; and
- incapable of returning to the missing individual’s residence without assistance by reason of:
- mental illness;
- mental retardation;
- dementia; or
- another physical or mental incapacity of managing or directing the management of the individual’s property or providing or directing the provision of self-care.
High Risk Missing Person Defined (Indiana Code 5-2-17-1)
This is a person whose whereabouts are not known and who may be at risk of injury or death. The term includes the following:
- A person who is missing as the result of abduction by a stranger.
- A person whose disappearance may be the result of the commission of a crime.
- A person whose disappearance occurred under circumstances that are inherently dangerous.
- A person who is missing for more than thirty (30) days.
- A missing person who is in need of medical attention or prescription medication.
- A missing person who may be at risk due to abduction by a noncustodial parent.
- A missing person who is mentally impaired.
- A missing person who is less than twenty-one (21) years of age.
- A missing person who has previously been the victim of a threat of violence or an act of violence.
- A missing person who has been determined by a law enforcement agency to be:
- at risk of injury or death; or
- a person that meets any of the descriptions in subdivisions (1) through (9).
- A missing person who is an endangered adult.
Blue Alert Guidelines
Blue Alert Criteria:
- A law enforcement officer, must be missing, seriously injured, or killed in the line of duty. The suspect in the case has not been apprehended, and the suspect poses an imminent threat to the public or other law enforcement personnel.
- A detailed description of the suspect(s), any available images, and any vehicle believed to be in the suspect’s possession (to include license plate number, make, and model of the vehicle) must be available for broadcast to the public.
- The lead law enforcement agency /agency of jurisdiction must request issuance of a Blue Alert.
Broadcasters:
- Announce Blue Alerts during normal news broadcast or as determined by each media outlet. Accept Regional Blue Alert.
Department of Transportation (Dynamic Message Signs):
- Carry Blue Alerts only when detailed vehicle information is known (license plate, make, model, and color).
- Remove when vehicle information is no longer valid or alert is terminated.
PIO
- Notify media outlets via email.
- Update to Social Media sites.
Read the full House Bill 1151 that established the Blue Alert system
Get more information on Indiana’s Blue Alert system