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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Arrests, routine traffic stops and other
law enforcement daily duties can be dangerous for police
officers, but now they are becoming a little safer, faster and
accurate thanks to a new system developed by computer scientists
at The University of Alabama.
Earlier this year, a 13-year-old in Florence, Ala., was
raped. She did not know her rapist’s name but thought she
might know part of his address. Florence Police Department
Deputy Chief Pete Williford was able to search numerous state
databases and download a driver’s license photo of the
suspect. The victim made a positive identification, and the
suspect was arrested the next day.
Williford was able to do a fast and reliable search of
existing databases using the Law Enforcement Tactical System, or
LETS, developed by computer scientists at The University of
Alabama with direct support of the Southwest Alabama Integrated
Criminal-Justice System.
LETS is a secure, Web-based search engine that allows law
enforcement and criminal justice agencies to search numerous
databases simultaneously, returning information in real time
while it facilitates in-depth searches. Those searches can be
done by person or vehicle characteristics. The system was
developed by UA’s CARE Research & Development Laboratory (CRDL)
in 2002 and has grown rapidly.
“We wanted to develop a new way to produce and deliver
criminal justice information directly to the point of use,”
explained Dr. David Brown, computer science professor and
director of development of the CRDL. “Officers in the field
can find out who is driving a car they are following and can
make a positive identification of people who do not have their
driver’s license in their possession.”
LETS also can check warrants and protection orders. Officers
on the side of the road can gain access to these databases
without having to radio the information to a dispatcher, who
would then input it into one database at a time.
Taking less time to look up information could save lives.
“When an officer has more immediate access to data, he or
she can make more appropriate and timely decisions,” Brown
added.
Brown works with Dr. Allen Parrish, associate professor of
computer science and director of the CRDL, and Dr. Brandon
Dixon, assistant professor of computer science, on the growing
LETS project. Currently, there are about 2,000 users of the
system, and an average of one database a month is being added.
The UA team is working with several agencies throughout the
state to continue the development and implementation of LETS,
including the Alabama Office of Law Enforcement Systems
Integration and Standards, Department of Public Safety,
Administrative Office of Courts, Office of the Attorney General,
and the Department of Economic and Community Affairs. Direct
financial support has come from the Southwest Alabama Integrated
Criminal Justice System.
In 1837, UA became the first university in the state to offer
engineering classes and was one of the first five in the nation
to do so. Today, the College
of Engineering, with about 1,900 students and more than 90
faculty, is one of the three oldest continuously operating
engineering programs in the country and has been fully
accredited since accreditation standards were implemented in the
1930s.
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