The 3 AM problem
An officer rolls up on a vehicle break-in at 3:17 AM. They photograph the scene, document the plate, talk to the witness, file a quick CAD note — and then promise themselves they'll write the long-form report at end of shift. By 6:00 AM they're exhausted, the details have decayed, and the resulting paragraph reads: "Observed broken window on parked vehicle. Photos attached." That's worthless to a property manager trying to spot a pattern.
What voice reporting changes
With a voice-first workflow, the officer narrates the incident into the radio mic or phone the instant they finish photographing the scene. AI transcribes in real time, extracts the structured fields a property manager actually needs — location, vehicle make/model/plate, time, witness name, property damage estimate — and files a draft incident report before the officer leaves the scene.
- Report drafted in <60 seconds, not 25 minutes.
- Original audio retained as evidence.
- Property manager email arrives within 15 minutes.
- Searchable across the entire property's history — "show me all break-ins on building 4 in the last 90 days."
Why managers should care
Faster reports = faster insurer notification, faster police follow-up, faster trend detection. A property that catches a copper-theft pattern in week one instead of week six saves five weeks of losses. Voice reporting is how that pattern gets caught.
How Stormhammer uses it
Our officers narrate incidents directly into a hardened mobile app. The transcript, photos, GPS, and audio are bundled into a single PDF and emailed to the property manager — usually before the officer is back in the patrol vehicle. Call (530) 902-9390 to see the demo report format.
