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COPLINK now poised to go global
12/04/03
by L. Anne Newell
An innovative crime-fighting program that began in
Tucson and gained national attention when used in the
D.C. sniper case has continued its spread across the
country - and is poised to move internationally.
Officials with Knowledge Computing Corp., which markets
COPLINK, will announce today that they have partnered
with a software development and systems-integration
company in the United Kingdom to market the
database-sharing program in Europe. It's one of the
highlights of 2003 for COPLINK, which links information
from disparate databases, allowing officers with only
partial information to successfully search for suspects.
Following a string of national awards and national
growth, officials with the program and Knowledge
Computing are more than optimistic.
"It's been a great year," said President and CEO Bob
Griffin. "Our business is really starting to explode."
The people working on the project at the Tucson Police
Department agree. "I feel great and proud," said
Detective Tim Petersen. "I just get more excited every
day with all the new things we're doing."
Petersen and several others received a concrete reminder
of the importance of COPLINK on Tuesday, when police
held a small ceremony to laud the group's finalist
finish for the Webber Seavey Award from the
International Association of Chiefs of Police.
Finishing in the top 10 of 144 entries - which included
FBI and other federal programs - showed the importance
of their work, Chief Richard Miranda told the group.
"It's made me very proud," he said.
From a small room at the University of Arizona's
Artificial Intelligence Lab, the program has grown
significantly since its original technology was
developed in 1996. In fact, Griffin expects COPLINK to
be in place in about 30 agencies by the end of the year.
It's already in Phoenix; Ann Arbor, Mich.; Boston; and
the entire state of Alaska, among other areas.
There are plans to work with the entire San Diego area
and the U.S. Border Patrol as well as to create a larger
Pima County system by uniting TPD records with those
from the Marana Police Department and the Pima County
Sheriff's Department. Officials hope to create a unified
Southwest Border system and even have plans to work with
national security agencies.
Then There's Europe
Working with Orbitron Technologies, officials hope to
impress people the way they did with the sniper
investigation in the Washington, D.C., area, Griffin
said, even though they arrived just as John Allen
Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo were taken into custody.
"Even though we got in at the end of the investigation,
we were able to show them we would have been able to
identify the suspects even faster," Griffin said. He
explained that the software would have shown officials
that the same blue car from New Jersey was stopped near
all the shootings but was let go because police were
searching for a white van.
In addition to the International Association of Chiefs
of Police award, COPLINK has been honored by the Center
for Digital Government and several other agencies. In
the Tuesday presentation - in which medals were given to
Petersen, Daniel Casey, Officer Linda Ridgeway, Sgt.
Chuck Violette, Lt. Jennifer Schroeder and Capt. David
Neri - officials said the honors have enhanced the
reputation of Tucson and the Police Department.
"What this means is that Tucson, given the size of the
community, is as innovative, progressive and
forward-looking as any department worldwide," said Paul
Punske, with Motorola, co-sponsor of the Webber Seavey
award. |