NCJ Number
224534
Date Published
October 2008
Length
2 pages
Annotation
This article describes how the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) has benefited through partnership with a commercial network carrier to improve data speed and resource access.
Abstract
The LAPD utilizes the commercial carrier Sprint for wireless data communications in its field units. The LAPD has been using Sprint since 2007 to provide data access services to 1,600 patrol cars with positive results. A significant improvement has been made in the amount of data that can be sent to the field. Photos and fingerprint images are able to be sent back and forth. The system can also be used for automated report writing, mapping, and access to the department intranet. Officers will soon have limited access to Internet sites. The system is also used for access to the California Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (CLETS), Department of Motor Vehicles information, warrant checks, and connection with the FBI's National Crime Information Center. The system also provides computer-aided dispatch, access to the LAPD's internal records systems, and access to COPLINK for information sharing and analysis. The LAPD built its old network at a cost of $20 million, and continues to maintain it. With Sprint, the LAPD pays about $1 million a year to have the commercial carrier available.
Date Published: October 1, 2008
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Trauma Behind the Keyboard: Exploring Disparities in Child Sexual Abuse Material Exposure and Mental Health Factors among Police Investigators and Forensic Examiners – A Network Analysis
- Practices for Law Enforcement Interviews of Potential Human Trafficking Victims: A Scoping Review
- Overcoming Recruiting Shortages by Applying Industrial and Organizational Psychology Practices