This article is reprinted with permission from Barrett and Greene, Inc.
By Jacob Cramer
Many people assume police departments have their data systems figured out. They think when a crime happens, departments can instantly pull up every relevant detail, prior 911 calls and incidents, arrest history and even a suspect’s mental health background. But that vision is far from true.
The systems upon which law enforcement depends are often disconnected. Critical information sits in silos, locked away in outdated software or inaccessible databases. We’ve built a world where agencies have more data to reference than ever before, but using that data to improve public safety is still incredibly hard. To fix this, we need a coordinated push for interoperability through shared standards, open architecture and regional data-sharing frameworks that empower — not hinder — first responders. The technology exists today. What’s needed now is the leadership to connect it.
Data silos inside the same department
Even within a single department, data are often fragmented. You’ll often find separate systems for 911 calls, criminal reports, traffic citations, bodycam footage, training records, policies and more. None of them were built to talk to each other. That means officers responding to a call might not see a subject’s prior incidents or relevant behavioral health history, even if the data exist somewhere else in their own department’s systems.
It’s not uncommon to see command staff export spreadsheets manually just to stitch together a basic view of a case or community trend. That’s a risky workaround in a field where every second matters.
One of the biggest hurdles is that many of the tools used in public safety are proprietary, with many vendors amassing data and building systems that only work with their own software. These so-called “walled gardens” are problematic and often mean that agencies get locked into long-term contracts and closed platforms, making it almost impossible to integrate with other tools or share information seamlessly between jurisdictions.
The result is duplication, inefficiency and blind spots that compromise both officer effectiveness and public trust. Instead of streamlining access to the right data, these systems keep it trapped in silos.
Disconnected crimes and missing patterns
The challenge isn’t only technical. Local politics, different IT capabilities across departments, and entrenched habits all play a role. Departments can be territorial about their data, and I’ve even worked with agencies where divisions within the same building wouldn’t share information. The situation gets even more complicated when you add courts, jails and social services into the mix. Everyone agrees that more connected systems would help. But making it happen requires collaboration, infrastructure and most of all, trust.
For example, in the Bay Area, organized retail theft groups often hit multiple stores in different cities in a single day. Without effective methods of sharing data across jurisdictions, each department may see only one theft, instead of the string of thefts that occurred. Investigators then may miss the patterns because data are not shared in consistent ways across departments. That means repeat offenders can keep operating under the radar, taking advantage of agencies that only see part of the story.
RTCCs and the case for regional sharing
Real-time crime centers, or RTCCs, are becoming more common and offer a positive example of efforts to integrate otherwise siloed data. They aim to give departments a centralized view of what’s happening in their communities using live data from cameras, sensors and databases. When they work well, they’re powerful. But their effectiveness depends significantly on how much and what kind of data they can pull in. Many RTCCs are still limited by the same silos and vendor constraints. If they can’t see the full picture, including data from outside their jurisdiction, they can’t truly operate in real time.
The United States has about 18,000 law enforcement agencies. Each one has its own systems, contracts and policies. Building true interoperability will take more than just upgrading software. It requires a new mindset around regional data sharing.
That doesn’t mean everyone gets access to everything. It means building secure pathways for departments to connect data when there’s a lawful and necessary reason. It means setting common standards for how systems talk to one another. And it means designing tools that support privacy, accountability and local control from the start.
At ForceMetrics, we’re working with agencies to unify their own data across 911, crime reports, jail management and more into one platform that gives officers and leadership the context they need. Our goal isn’t just tech for tech’s sake. It’s about making sure responders have the right information to make better decisions in the field. But even the best tools can’t solve this alone. Agencies need to be willing to rethink how they manage and share their data. That’s a leadership challenge, not just a product one.
Public safety depends on better systems
At the end of the day, this isn’t about dashboards or data science. It’s about the decisions we make with the information we have or don’t have. If departments don’t have the full picture, they can’t make the best decisions. That affects everything from how resources are deployed to how communities are protected. We owe it to the public to fix this. We owe it to officers on the front lines. And we owe it to the people who fall through the cracks when the system doesn’t work.
We can’t keep pretending the data are fine just because they exist. We have to connect them, use them and truly make them count.
About the author
Jacob Cramer is Director of Data Innovation for ForceMetrics and a former Analysis Administrator for the Tucson (Arizona) Police Department.