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City Hall stymies LAPD
Anti-crime software acquisition delayed
08/17/04
by James Nash
City Hall bureaucracy has stymied the Los Angeles Police
Department's efforts to buy a $2 million crime-fighting
computer system that would help in the arrests of
thousands of gang members a year and free up dozens of
officers for other duties, the Daily News has learned.
LAPD officials hope to revive the year-old efforts to
buy a widely used computer program called COPLINK at a
meeting today. COPLINK allows police to target violent
criminals by linking various databases -- including
sex-offender registries, gang databases and inmate
records -- providing ready access to information that
otherwise requires a time-consuming search through each
system.
"I wish that this would be moving a lot faster," said
LAPD Assistant Chief George Gascon, who is championing
the COPLINK program.
"For me, it's frustrating. Without endorsing the
particular software company, these capabilities are very
critical to our crime-fighting ability. We have to be
smarter than other agencies because we don't have the
people to throw at the problem."
The COPLINK proposal isn't dead, but is being considered
as part of the LAPD's overall technology package, said
Ron Wilkerson, who was hired in June as the department's
chief information officer.
The LAPD has fewer than 9,200 officers -- down by more
than 100 from last year's level. Although most
categories of crime are declining, the homicide rate as
of July 31 was up 3.3 percent over the comparable period
last year, according to the latest LAPD data available.
According to a report prepared by a consultant for Chief
Legislative Analyst Ron Deaton, COPLINK technology would
allow LAPD officers to increase arrests of gang members
by 83 a week above the current average of 128.
In addition, the time saved by using COPLINK would free
up 128 officers for other duties, according to the
report by consultant Mike Mount. His conclusions were
based largely on the experience of the police department
in Tucson, Ariz., which has used COPLINK since the
mid-1990s.
COPLINK would cost the LAPD $1.6 million to $2.2 million
to start, possibly defrayed by grants, and about
$250,000 to $350,000 a year to operate, officials said.
Tucson Police Department Detective Tim Petersen said
COPLINK has made a big difference in that
500,000-population city, which has struggled with gang
violence. He said the program is easy to use and
particularly efficient in spotting gang members who
assume multiple identities.
"We definitely have used it to solve or assist in dozens
of cases where we (otherwise) may not have been able to
solve it or would have taken a lot longer to do it,"
Petersen said.
COPLINK digs through crime records to find connections
of people, places and things, and it gives officers
ready access to a catalog of information about suspects
and crime locations, he said.
More than 100 U.S. cities use COPLINK, said Robert
Griffin, president of Knowledge Computing Corp., a
Tucson company that licenses the program.
Although LAPD leaders were enthusiastic about COPLINK,
officials at City Hall put the brakes on the purchase by
insisting that police take more time to evaluate how the
program would work in Los Angeles and to consider
competing programs, Griffin said.
"The police were extremely unhappy about the opinion
that they needed to go with (a request for competing
proposals)," Griffin said. "The faster we get things in,
the more lives we're going to save. I don't know about
the politics of (the delay), but it wasn't the LAPD."
Deaton said he wants to make sure the LAPD isn't
spending money on technology that might be incompatible
with databases already in use, as well as ones in
development on complaints against officers, incidents
involving use of force by officers and trends involving
officer behavior.
"The concept of having crime data and allocating people
accordingly is something I fully support. ... Getting
accurate data and processing it so it can be used in
that area is the difficult task," Deaton said.
He declined to comment further on the reasons for the
delay.
The LAPD has long suffered from backward and
incompatible technology. The monitor overseeing the
LAPD's compliance with a federal consent decree
mandating reforms has repeatedly faulted the department
for its slowness in developing a program to track
officer behavior.
The LAPD's new chief technology officer, Ron Wilkerson,
conceded that the LAPD is saddled with "somewhat
disjointed" technology.
Wilkerson, who was hired in June, is exploring whether
COPLINK can be integrated into the LAPD, Chief William
Bratton said.
City Councilman Jack Weiss, who serves on council
committees dealing with the LAPD and with technology,
said he's frustrated at the slow progress of LAPD
technology.
"I think that the LAPD is rather technology-light,"
Weiss said. "These sorts of programs, when you get an
innovative leader like George Gascon behind them, really
should be put into place.
"I've seen the wheels turn mighty slowly around here,"
Weiss said. "Sometimes that's the nature of how we do
things." |