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Police Magazine
06/12/07
Law enforcement officials in Colorado's Grand Junction
and Mesa County police departments plan to invest in a
state-of-the-art, cross-reference database that will
enable information sharing, more efficient
communications, and expedite case investigations.
COPLINK provides analytical searching capabilities,
shares available information, and would link the city
and county database systems, as reported in The Daily
Sentinel. The databases for the city and county
currently operate on two separate systems and as such
don't "talk" to each other.
But with COPLINK, an officer can provide little or
partial information, such as an incomplete license plate
number or identifying tattoo, which the database would
cross-reference and process. The system's
cross-referencing capabilities would enable the officer
to access information other law enforcement agencies may
have compiled about the suspect if the suspect had had a
previous run-in with the law in another county or
jurisdiction.
"Combining the information into one system, which also
is connected to agencies on the Front Range, could save
law enforcement hundreds of hours in investigative
time," says Deputy Chief Troy Smith of the Grand
Junction Police Department. "Any number of cases could
be solved much quicker than right now."
Mesa County Sheriff Stan Hilkey concurs and says that
the COPLINK system is designed to help law enforcement
make connections in cases and identify and track
suspects more efficiently and more expeditiously.
"This [COPLINK] is something that we absolutely want to
do," says Hilkey. "I believe in any kind of system that
allows us to access and share data. That takes the whole
conversation to the next level." |