The whole point of the 10-9 Project is to give officers access to their MDC when they're out of the car. So right now, you do a lot of your self-initiated activity through running plates and things like that. You typically do that through your MDC. Once you get out of the car though, you're limited to basically using your radio to talk to dispatch and, you know, that saturates the channel quite a bit if every time every officer in your district ends up calling in a plate that looks a little bit strange or whatever they want to find out something about. So what we've done is we've developed a system that allows you to issue voice commands to a CAD application - a Computer-Aided Dispatch application - on your mobile data computer and have it take the message that come back from DMV and NCIC and LEDs and things like that, synthesize that, just those parts that you'd be most interested in, and run them back to you over your headset. In the past, cars would go by; they'd look a little bit fishy. You probably don't want to tie up dispatch, and you can't really get back to your car to run the plate to see if there's something that you should be concerned about. The last time we did this, I was able to use the MDC using voice commands to run plates as cars went by, picked up some suspended drivers, was able to radio ahead to some other cars to intercept them later on down the road. And they would've gotten by totally without using the headset. (Session Transcript Excerpt)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Advancing Police-researcher Collaboration and Evidence-based Policing: an Evaluation of the Applied Criminology and Data Management Course
- Law Enforcement Tools to Detect, Document, and Communicate Use of Service Weapons
- What Every Law Enforcement Officer Should Know About DNA Evidence: Investigators and Evidence Technicians (Advanced Module)