 |

More info at police agencies'
fingertips. A new $1.6 million computer system will
connect cities, courts and county.
02/07/05
by JOHN McDONALD
NEWPORT BEACH - A $1.6 million computer system is being
installed this year to give police officers throughout
Orange County a litany of information about any person
they question about a crime.
Police now generally have access only to computer
information kept by their own department and obtained
through the California Department of Justice. That will
begin to change in about three months, when the first
phase of the system called COPLINK goes on line.
COPLINK will give patrol officers and investigators
nearly immediate access to vast banks of computer
information stored by all 22 police agencies in the
county, along with records from the courts, the District
Attorney's Office and the probation department, said
Newport Beach police Capt. Paul Henisey.
Information will be available through laptop computers
in many police cars. It will give an officer information
that includes whether a person has had previous traffic
offenses, been involved in an auto accident or was the
victim of a crime, said Bob Griffin, chief executive
officer of Knowledge Computing Corp., the Arizona
company providing the system.
Investigators will be able to use the system to find
whether similar crimes were committed anywhere in the
county or whether any other agencies have information on
their suspects, Griffin said. Vague descriptions of
suspects associated with certain cars, types of weapons
or nicknames can be checked through scores of databanks
to provide leads.
Orange County agencies use a wide range of computer
equipment and databases that ordinarily are
incompatible. The new system will standardize data from
the otherwise incompatible databases.
The system is currently used in 115 jurisdictions,
Griffin said.
Knowledge Computing won the contract after bids were
solicited by the Orange County Chiefs' and Sheriff's
Association, an informal group of police executives. The
chiefs selected Knowledge Computing from the nine
companies that applied. The project is funded by grants
from the Department of Homeland Security and the
Department of Justice.
The Newport Beach City Council voted recently to accept
the grants. No other public agencies were required to
consent to the contract, Henisey said.
The first phase of the project will incorporate into the
system data from Garden Grove, Brea, Irvine, Newport
Beach, the sheriff's department, Cypress, Seal Beach and
the Orange County courts. Henisey said the agencies were
selected based on their existing computer systems. Those
agencies have a variety of systems that will serve as a
first step toward expanding access to other police in
the county this year. |