NYC Real Time Crime Center Tracks Suspects

By TOM HAYS
The Associated Press

Wednesday, May 10, 2006; 4:21 AM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/10/AR2006051000262_pf.html


NEW YORK -- After an armed bandit held up a pizza joint in Manhattan late 
last year, witnesses reported seeing "Sugar" tattooed on the back of the 
man's neck as he made his getaway.

It was a tiny clue. But in a windowless room deep inside police 
headquarters, a team of detectives manning banks of computers checked the 
NYPD's tattoo database and made a quick identification of a suspect, which 
led to an arrest.

Police officials said it was another triumph for a 24-hour monument to 21st 
Century policing: the Real Time Crime Center. At an unveiling earlier this 
year, Mayor Michael Bloomberg hailed the $11 million center as the first of 
its kind and predicted it "will transform the way we solve crime."

The 37,000-officer NYPD, the nation's largest, has increasingly turned to 
technology in a bid to preserve steep declines in reports of serious crime 
since the early 1990s. Earlier this month, it installed the first of 
hundreds of surveillance cameras expected to keep an eye on high-crime 
neighborhoods.

The crime center was launched last year based on the theory that real-time 
tips would "increase the likelihood that we can catch criminals before they 
strike again," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said.

Detectives once needed days or weeks to knock on doors, work the phones and 
analyze data, often sifting through paper records by hand as suspects 
roamed free. Now, officials say, they have instantaneous access to 
computerized records.

The database describing tattoos of convicted criminals is the tip of the 
high-tech iceberg at detectives' disposal. It contains 120 million city 
records of criminal complaints, warrants and 911 calls dating back 10 
years. It also has 5 million state criminal and parole records and 35 
billion property and other public records.

The center also uses satellite imaging and computerized mapping systems to 
identify geographic patterns of crimes, and to pinpoint possible addresses 
where suspects might flee _ information relayed to investigators on the 
street via phone or wireless laptop computer.

"We begin working on a case before the detectives even arrive at a crime 
scene," said Deputy Chief Joseph D'Amico, the center's commanding officer.

On a recent day, detectives used the tattoo database to help hunt a robbery 
suspect whose description featured a "Mom" tattoo on his arm.

Flashed up on a giant wall of flat-screen monitors was a spreadsheet of 16 
names, each followed by "arm" in one column, "Mom" in the next. The list 
would be narrowed down, in part by using other records to determine which 
of the men were already behind bars, the chief said.

In the case of the pizza restaurant robbery, a check of "Sugar" showed it 
was a tattoo mostly preferred by prostitutes. An exception was a known 
robber with a known address.

The suspect's mug shot was rushed out to investigators in the field. The 
restaurant manager confirmed he was the bandit. The man was soon in custody.

Case closed.

The RTCC also proved instrumental in February when patrolmen came across a 
flipped car in Queens. The driver had fled, leaving behind a fatally 
wounded passenger.

A check of the license plate came back with a name and a dubious upstate 
address. The center's computers crunched the name and produced another 
address in Brooklyn. When police showed up at the door, the driver 
answered, his clothes still caked in blood. Elapsed time: two hours.

The investigation was among more than 900 that the center has assisted so 
far this year, D'Amico said. The department expects that number to grow as 
old-school detectives adopt the new approach.

"Some guys don't want to give up their typewriters for computers," he said. 
"I tell them this is the future. You can't fight it."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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