Busted: the NSW Police crime fighting toolkit

State-wide background checks, facial recognition, faster forensics

NSW Police will have access to a new forensic information database within nine months along with a suite of centralised records management and field imaging systems.

The state police force of 19500 officers is the biggest in the country and one of the largest in the world.

A spate of state-wide IT projects are rolling out and are already available across the command, including facial recognition system which this year has made 17,169 matches from 2.8 million stored images; Field ID which completed a rollout of 500 mobile fingerprint devices last week; the National Police Reference System including its Web-based Intranet Person Inquiry System available in June to interstate officers for real-time criminal checks; and the Forensic Services Digital Imaging project which issued police with a fleet of Nikon digital cameras for facial recognition and background checks in the field.

NSW Police assistant commissioner and director of the forensic services group Carlene York said the Forensic Information Management System has been under production for a decade and will save crucial time for forensic officers and detectives.

"It will reduce DNA backlogs with [forensic officers] and remove a lot of paper work required by police to request for forensic information," York said.

"Police investigators will be able to track and monitor forensic jobs. It will give more data to investigators and they will have a stronger briefs and achieve longer custodies."

Offenders often were acquitted of some suspected crimes because of the difficulty in collating evidence when it is not known that particular criminal acts are related, York said.

The state-wide database will link ballistics to forensics to make it easier for investigators to link known offences to suspects and build stronger convictions.

Victorian IT company Hardcat scored the contract and has delivered on time and on budget, York said.

Offenders will be less able to skip court under the Field ID system, according to York, which captures a digital fingerprint of suspects in the field and cross-references images to the near-completed National Police Reference System hosted in the Sydney Police headquarters. The system, developed over five years, delivers an identity confirmation within 90 seconds based on two index and two thumb prints.

"Previously if we didn't have [an offender's] fingerprints and they skipped court, it was hard to trace them," York said.

NSW Police has trained 7500 officers in the use of the Forensic Services Digital Imaging system and the corresponding Digital Images Management System, including legislation forbidding use of the system to do background checks on non-suspects.

More about: Hardcat, Nikon, NSW Police
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Comments

1

MaxT

Tue 02/06/2009 - 10:27

Big Brother is here.
More's

Big Brother is here.

More's the pity.

Freedom?

'What's freedom, Daddy?'

2

JB

Tue 02/06/2009 - 10:58

I wonder if now they will also get around to destroying the 'evidence' and records of innocent people's finger prints and the like.
By law they can hold them for a lil while ( up to 5 years I believe ) but they are to be destroyed by that point in time. But currently there is no overview and no punishment for failure to comply on their part. As such, even the innocent may find that their details are listed on the data bases.

Freedom?
'Well child, freedom is where you are given the option to choose out of a list of options that are strictly government approved.'

3

gnome

Tue 02/06/2009 - 11:57

this is good

It's good to hear that the police are able to use advanced technology to identify criminals. The crims oh-so-flexible paid mouthpieces in the legal industry have used every trick in the book to have their criminal clients found not guilty, when it must have been obvious that they were.

Yes, this will give us more freedom. It's not Big Brother to ensure that ordinary people can go about their daily lives free from being abused in every sense by criminals.

4

NWO

Tue 02/06/2009 - 17:33

Good

This is a good start. I would love there to be a national database with both DNA, Photo and finger print data for every body.

yes I know there would be major concerns about security, it would have to be granular access and done a hell of a lot better than government normally does and the legistlation to back it up.

Not only would this make searches for suspects faster but it also helps in those cases of identifying victims. Yes there are risks. There are risks with everything but there are also great advantages.

Still don't totally trust either state or Federal governments

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