Technology
Policing Matters host Jim Dudley reported from the event on the innovations poised to speed response and lighten workloads across public safety
From burnout to breakthrough: AI’s role in trauma-informed investigations
Scottsdale Police didn’t follow a template; it built a Drone as First Responder program designed around its terrain, staffing and commitment to transparency
The use of facial recognition will grow not only in law enforcement, but in private society as well
From the moment you spot the weaving car to the time you generate your report, MyFSTs gathers the data you need to make an arrest stand up
When officers need to investigate an unwitnessed vehicle crash, especially a fatal one, they can usually find plenty of physical evidence. Unless, of course, it ends up underwater
Proponents of body-worn cameras say they protect officers from false accusations, reduce agency liability and citizen complaints, and provide evidence for use in court
Fully automated, tabletop system provides DNA analysis results in less than 85 minutes
The iCrime app removes the evidence technician ‘middle man’ by allowing cops to directly and instantly upload information and photos to their report-writing system
MOST POPULAR
- The CES effect: Why the world’s largest tech show matters to policing
- AI on the duty belt (tip sheet)
- Signal detection for police: How it works and when to use it
- Police departments are using data to motivate, protect and empower their officers
- An online solution to the law enforcement recruitment problem