AP via Houston Chronicle:
The tip came in fast, telegraph-terse, and discreet. Maj. Mohammed Salman Abass Ali al-Zobaidi of the Iraqi National Guard scrolled down to read it: "Black four-door Excalibur. Behind cinema."From cell phone screen to local authorities: Acting on the recent text message tip to al-Zobaidi, police in a nearby town tracked down a black car behind the theater and arrested the driver for suspected links to insurgent attacks.
In the volatile Shiite-Sunni area south of Baghdad known as the "triangle of death," Iraqi civilians increasingly are letting their thumbs do the talking, via text messages sent from the safety of their homes, Iraqi security forces and U.S. Marines say.
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Although a cell phone displays the caller's number, phone records are so chaotic in Iraq that chances are slim anyone could track down a tipster. And text messages can be sent to the most trusted officer, a far safer avenue than calling a police station that might be riddled with informants.
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