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Funding for new police tool approved. COPLINK
purchase
paired with other metro area buys.
1/7/2008 10:47:00 PM
By J.C. O'Connell
The Aurora Sentinel
Aurora | Local lawmakers approved funding Monday night,
Jan. 7, for COPLINK, a computer software system that
some say will revolutionize the way criminals are caught
in Aurora.
Aurora City Council awarded $329,221 to Knowledge
Computing Corp. for the software management system.
"It's going to be the most exciting thing we've done in
policing in this state in a long time," said Police
Chief Dan Oates, who purchased the same technology as
chief of police in Ann Arbor, Mich.
The system allows police to search a variety of
databases, including sex offender registries, court
citations and records from various departments. More
than 600 jurisdictions throughout the country use the
system. Locally, all of the municipalities in Jefferson
County use it.
In addition to allowing Aurora police officers to better
integrate their own data and profiles on criminal
suspects, the technology will help law enforcement
departments across Colorado exchange information more
quickly, supporters said.
The software is also being acquired by seven other
Colorado municipalities, Oates said.
Together, the law enforcement agencies that signed an
agreement with Aurora to purchase the software and share
information across the system, represent a total force
of 4,749 law enforcement officers.
Oates said it will take two to three months to get
COPLINK up and running.
Oates originally proposed acquiring the system in 2006
for $425,000, but the city was able to negotiate a lower
price because other jurisdictions agreed to also
purchase the technology.
Councilwoman Molly Markert, who was initially
skeptically of COPLINK, congratulated Oates and the
city's IT Department on their work, calling COPLINK a
"metro-wide solution to a metro-wide problem." |