SAN DIEGO -- RoboCop would be proud. Maybe even amazed.
Like
the main character of the then-futuristic 1987 movie about an all-seeing
humanoid cop, patrol officers are being equipped with the kind of
high-tech communications gear that puts them on the cutting edge.
Officers
are being wired to wear wide-angle miniature cameras on their uniforms
that see and hear what they are seeing and hearing. They are being
issued new smartphone-like devices so video of suspects or tactical
situations can be fed to them in the field. Their cars automatically
scan license plates and tip them off if they are about to encounter an
ex-con.
Police departments are jumping headlong into social media,
connecting with the community to turn the tables on crime. They are
even writing their own blogs from their patrol cars so officers can keep
each other updated about events on their beats.
Even wilder stuff
is on the horizon. One inventor, for example, is marketing a sleeve
with a built-in video display, a camera, a laser beam and a stun gun for
self-defense.
"Tech is huge in all aspects of law enforcement,"
said Albuquerque Police Chief Raymond Schultz after surveying the
high-tech gear on display at the International Association of Chiefs of
Police conference here earlier this month. "We continue to try to take
it to the next level."
In his 1,014-officer department, going to
the next level will include mandating wearable video cameras for all his
street cops and requiring that the video be switched on whenever a call
is answered. Schultz also is issuing smartphone-like devices that can
send video or photos directly to officers in the field. Before they
leave the station, Albuquerque officers headed out on the beat can see
changing crime patterns on electronic bulletin boards.
New police car watches everything
Motorola
Solutions, a huge supplier of police radios for decades and now also of
laptops and other communications gear, is showing departments how a
Ford Police Interceptor can be transformed into a rolling TV studio. A
demonstration version of the car, Ford's law enforcement version of the
Taurus sedan, is equipped with seven video cameras to cover every angle
of an officer's encounters with the public, victims or suspects.
One
camera, for instance, automatically scans license plates. That can be
used to identify stolen vehicles or track down wanted suspects. It also
allows the car's computer to warn officers making a traffic stop if
they are approaching a parolee, parking-ticket deadbeat, ex-felon,
fugitive or crime suspect.
Another camera aimed at the back seat records an arrestee's words and actions on the way to the slammer.
Instead
of storing those hours of video in the car for retrieval later, the
Motorola Solutions version has it constantly uploaded to a data center
where it can be processed and stored. "We're trying to make the police
car their mobile office," says Bob Schassler, a Motorola Solutions
senior vice president.
If the police car sounds sophisticated, look what's coming for the cops themselves.
Motorola
Solutions envisions officers wearing not only video cameras, but also
heart-rate monitors so police operators know when the officer is in a
high-stress situation.
And a sensor records whenever they release the strap on their pistol holster. That data, too, get fed back to the station.
Next-generation 911
The ideas and new gear are part of a drive- called "next-generation 911" - to modernize police dispatch and communications.
It
is, in part, an effort to enable cops to use some of the same
technology that the citizens they protect already use, such as sending
text messages or video over secure channels.
Why shouldn't police
officers speeding to a crime scene be able to talk directly to victims
without having to have all the information they need to know relayed
through a dispatch center?
Or if they encounter a barricaded
suspect, why not be able to have schematic drawings of the location sent
wirelessly to their smartphone screen?
"That's the future," says
Michael Bostic, a former Los Angeles deputy police chief who now works
for Raytheon, another big tech supplier to law enforcement. "It's all
going to be data."
Even for motorcycle cops. The high-tech goodies
aren't just going to officers in patrol cruisers. Now, even motorcycles
are starting to be equipped with laptops that officers can use by the
side of the road.
In a demonstration, Raytheon is equipping about
100 Los Angeles County Sheriff's motorcycles with laptops that deputies
can pull out of a saddle bag during traffic stops and quickly fire up to
use for license-plate checks and wanted-suspect inquiries.
Inventor's high-tech 'sleeve'
Big corporations aren't the only ones with new ideas for high-tech communications for law enforcement.
Entrepreneur
David Brown gave up his job as a technician in the film industry to
pursue his dream of developing a sleeve that police officers can wear
with a built-in video screen and a camera, a sort of full-sleeve update
of Dick Tracy's two-way wristwatch.
The sleeve also has a laser
pointer to light up potential troublemakers and a stun gun for
self-defense. One advantage of the sleeve over other versions of such
gear is that it would be much more difficult to wrest away from an
officer in a struggle.
Brown's company, ArmStar, based in El
Segundo, Calif., is trying to market the sleeve to police departments
and corrections agencies.
Video could have downside
While
much of the new technology and capabilities are built on forms of
video, personnel at the police chiefs convention saw risks as well as
opportunities in greater use of video and other real-time
communications.
Police officers worry that video shot with body
cameras will be regularly sought and used, in or out of context, by
defense lawyers trying to find fault with their techniques or to try to
document alleged brutality.
Increasingly, though, there is support
in the ranks for more video because "we want the public to know the
full facts of what occurred" when it comes to a controversial encounter,
says Capt. Mike Parker of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.
A bigger issue for departments is cost. And not just for the equipment.
With
budgets already devastated by the recession, they are trying to figure
out how to catalog and manage what would be, for a big department,
thousands and thousands of hours of mostly routine video, part of which
could become evidence in court cases.
"Do you know what it would take to store all that video?" Parker asks.
Using social media
While
the answer to that is "big money," Parker's department and others are
finding some information technology solutions can be had without having
to shell out a lot money.
One of the best examples is surveillance
of social media. Parker says his department uses Twitter, monitors chat
rooms and uses other social media to try to get ahead of potential
crime problems.
"Big Brother has become the people themselves," he says.
Planning a riot? The invitations will probably go out on Facebook or Twitter - and deputies will be watching.
The strategy paid off recently when sheriff's deputies discovered the invitation for a rowdy rave with gallons of cheap booze.
A
couple of officers paid a visit - as full preparations were underway -
to issue a stern warning. That headed off what Parker says would have
been the need for 20 deputies to show up in the middle of the night to
break up the party.
"We get there before it's happening," he says. "We're not used to having that level of information."
In
Tampa, police are putting social media to use in other ways. They have
installed systems in their cars that create their own department
intranet.
Officers patrolling the community can type up their
notes in a blog from their car and send them around to others. And
officers returning from a few days off can use the blog to update
themselves on issues that came up while they were off.
They can also use the system, called NC4 Safecop, to analyze neighborhood crime data - right from the car.
"This
is real-time information," says Tampa Police Chief Jane Castor.
"Technology is invaluable for officers in the day-to-day crime fight."
USA Today