Victims of some crime in Atlanta can now file their own incident report online.

The Citizen Online Reporting System allows the public to submit reports whenever they choose. The goal is to help free up officer resources and increase the accuracy of incidents reported to police, an Atlanta Police Department press release said.

Reports can still be filled by calling 911 and asking for an officer or going into the zone precinct.

“We expect this automated system to make it both easier for people to report crime to us and to free up officer time that can be better spent responding to high-priority calls and providing proactive policing in our communities,” Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields said in a statement.

Crime victims can write their own narrative and provide police with as much detail as they like. The reports are then reviewed by police and potentially assigned to an investigator.

The following crimes can be reported 24-7 via CORS: 

• Custody order violations

• Damage to property (vandalism)

• Fraudulent use of credit card

• Gas drive-Off

• Harassing communication

• Identity theft

• Lost property

• Shoplifting

• Supplemental report – adding additional information to an approved APD report

• Theft (under $10,000); firearms cannot be reported stolen online

• Theft from an outbuilding or storage facility (no suspect or force used)

Watch a tutorial:

READ | Ex-East Point cop accused of assaulting multiple women granted bond

READ | Anger over Atlanta sign: 'Ruin ur future Supreme Court chances here'

Like Intown Atlanta News Now on Facebook | Follow us on Twitter

About the Author

Keep Reading

Former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin poses for a photograph inside her residence on Monday, Jan. 13, 2025. When Franklin was elected mayor in 2001, she not only became the first Black woman to serve as mayor in Atlanta, but the first of any major Southern city. (Miguel Martinez/AJC)

Credit: Miguel Martinez-Jimenez

Featured

Former District Attorney Jackie Johnson smiles at a supporter who took her hand Monday after Senior Judge John R. Turner dismissed one of the two charges she faced.

Credit: Terry Dickson/ The Brunswick News