In Taylorsville, Utah, Taylorsville Police Department is working with Code Four to reduce reporting drag across serious follow-up investigations, property and follow-up casework, and special-victims and sensitive investigations. The focus is faster first drafts, cleaner review, and more officer time back for calls and follow-up.

Taylorsville Police Department's public materials point to a workload built around serious follow-up investigations, property and follow-up casework, and special-victims and sensitive investigations. That means the first report has to support review, follow-up, and the next step in the case without keeping officers buried in paperwork longer than necessary.
That means the reporting burden here is not limited to standard patrol narratives. A district officer’s first report may need to support special-victims or violent-crime follow-up almost immediately.
Code Four helps Taylorsville PD move from footage, notes, and scene detail into a cleaner first draft that matches a workflow built around serious follow-up investigations, special-victims and sensitive investigations, and canine-supported response. The value is less time spent rebuilding narratives and more time available for calls, supervision, and investigative handoff.
A better draft can preserve chronology earlier, reduce avoidable cleanup, and give detectives a more usable starting document when the case changes hands.
Taylorsville’s public materials already show why this fit is department-specific: a four-district policing model, specialized detective units inside special operations, and published offense data that includes sex offenses, robberies, family offenses, and stolen vehicles. Those are exactly the kinds of workflows where report quality affects both victim response and investigative speed.
Code Four is designed to support Taylorsville’s report-writing and review workflow without forcing the department to replace the systems and habits it built as a new municipal agency. The rollout can stay focused on the first report, the first supervisor review, and the first handoff into special operations or detective follow-up.
That keeps implementation realistic for a department balancing district visibility with specialized casework.
See how Code Four works with your bodycam and RMS systems in a live demo.




