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Chicago
police receive data analysis tool
By Michael Hardy
10/04/07
The Chicago Police Department has deployed a data
analysis system called Coplink that will allow users to
find non-obvious relationships and patterns and solve
crimes more quickly.
The system, made by Tucson, Ariz.-based Knowledge
Computing Corp., is already in use in about 550
jurisdictions around the country, according to Robert
Griffin, the company’s chief executive officer. The
Chicago department’s Crime Center serves as the nucleus
of a data sharing initiative that encompasses more than
400 departments, primarily in Illinois and Indiana.
“This will enable us to build on the successes we’ve
already achieved at the Crime Center in thwarting
criminals who operate across multiple jurisdictions in
an attempt to avoid detection,” said Interim
Superintendent Dana V. Starks.
The system can compare data housed in incompatible
databases and records management systems. Users can
provide facts about an undergoing investigation and the
system will find relationships between that information
and existing data, providing new leads and avenues for
law enforcement organizations to explore.
Officials used the system during the 2002 investigation
of the random murders of the Washington, D.C., snipers
as its proof-of-concept operation.
The value of the Chicago contract is about $500,000.
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