COPS COULD HIT THE LINKS SOON NEW SEARCH ENGINE WOULD CATALOG, INTERPRET DATA FOR INVESTIGATIONS.Byline: Jason Kandel Staff Writer Los Angeles Police Department "LAPD" and "L.A.P.D." redirect here. For other uses, see LAPD (disambiguation). inhabitant of Gascony, France; people noted for their bragging. [Fr. Hist.: NCE, 1049] See : Boastfulness is seeking $750,000 in grants and donations to purchase a new computer application that consolidates nationwide crime data and arrest reports, which would aid local detectives in solving criminal investigations. Coplink searches through millions of pieces of data in various computer arrest reports, crime records, field interviews and traffic citation reports, and delivers a list of leads to detectives instantaneously. ``My goal is to find money in the next couple of weeks,'' Gascon said. ``I want to have this up and running by February. I think we can save lives with this thing.'' Coplink, developed at an artificial intelligence lab Artificial Intelligence Lab - MIT AI Lab at the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service. in 1996 and procured through a $1.2 million grant through the U.S. Department of Justice in 1998 is being implemented in cities, counties and federal government agencies nationwide. Several metropolitan police agencies in cities such as Boston, New York Boston is a town in Erie County, New York, United States. The population was 7,897 at the 2000 census. The town is named after Boston, Massachusetts. The Town of Boston is an interior town of the county and one of the county's "Southtowns. and Tampa have been considering using it or already are using it. Even federal agencies such as the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). and FBI are seeking the system. LAPD 1. LAPD - Link Access Procedure on the D channel. 2. LAPD - Los Angeles Police Department. Detective Jeffrey Godown said Coplink would cut hundreds of hours out of detectives' work and would offer up clues that could be overlooked by human error. Coplink would be attached to the 20 criminal databases the LAPD already uses. The new system would search any kind of police contact with suspects, victims and witnesses that has been recorded in their databases. ``With all those database systems we have, it makes it difficult to query each one,'' Godown said. ``It makes it difficult to take all the information and tie it together to ultimately find the bad guy. Coplink searches it all at once. It's like a one-stop shop system. There isn't anything like that in this department.'' Gascon has been looking for funding from private firms, which he would not identify. He's been talking to city officials to get input on ways to raise money for the project. ``I'm not looking for city funding because I know we don't have it, but for some help,'' he said. ``I'm on the warpath on a hostile expedition; hence, colloquially, about to attack a person or measure. See also: Warpath right now.'' Eventually, Gascon said, he hopes to get terminals installed in every station in across the city, so that officers and detectives can access the new database. Jason Kandel, (818) 713-3664 jason.kandel(at)dailynews.com |
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