http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080702/D91LRUL04.html

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Police in the 1970s urged citizens to "drop a dime" in a pay 
phone to report crimes anonymously. Now in an increasing number of cities, 
tipsters are being invited to use their thumbs - to identify criminals using 
text messages.

Police hope the idea helps recruit teens and 20-somethings who wouldn't 
normally dial a Crime Stoppers hot line to share information with authorities.

"If somebody hears Johnny is going to bring a gun to school, hopefully they'll 
text that in," said Sgt. Brian Bernardi of the Louisville, Ky., Metro Police 
Department, which rolled out its text-message tip line in June.

Departments in Boston and Cincinnati started accepting anonymous text tips 
about a year ago. Since then, more than 100 communities have taken similar 
steps or plan to do so. The Internet-based systems route messages through a 
server that encrypts cell phone numbers before they get to police, making tips 
virtually impossible to track.

In Louisville earlier this week, Bernardi's computer displayed a text message 
from a person identified only as "Tip563." It read: "someone has vandalized the 
school van at valor school on bardstown rd in fern creek." The note also 
reported illegal dumping in a trash container and in the woods.

"It's obvious that the future of communication is texting," said officer 
Michael Charbonnier, commander of the Boston Police Department's Crime Stoppers 
unit. "You look at these kids today and that's all they're doing. You see five 
kids standing on the corner, and they're texting instead of having a 
conversation with each other."

When Boston adopted the system last year, the first text tip yielded an arrest 
in a New Hampshire slaying. In the 12 months that ended June 15, Boston police 
logged 678 text tips, nearly matching the 727 phone tips during the same period.

Earlier this year, a text tip led to the arrest of a notorious suspect in a 
drug case.

"We've gotten some great drug information, specific times, dates, names of 
suspects, locations, pickup times, license plate numbers," Charbonnier said. In 
another instance, a hearing-impaired man who could not call 911 used a text 
message to report a domestic violence incident.

Since the beginning of the year, cities such as Tampa, San Francisco, Seattle, 
Denver, Indianapolis, New Orleans and Detroit have started their own text-based 
tip systems, according to Texas-based Anderson Software, a leading providers of 
the technology. Many cities are adding the text messages to a system that 
already accepted anonymous tips through a Web site.

Lisa Haber, a sheriff's detective who heads the Tampa-area Crime Stoppers unit, 
recently spent an hour exchanging 21 text messages with a tipster about a 
possible stolen car. It didn't yield an arrest, but Haber said it allowed her 
to glimpse the potential of being able to communicate in real time with 
texters. A marketing blitz will help get the word out when students return to 
school later this summer.

"It's got a lot of potential," said Cincinnati police Lt. David Fink, whose 
agency has collected about five text tips a month since adopting the system in 
May 2007. "Just like when we started Crime Stoppers 27 years ago, it took some 
time for it to catch on."

Sarah Coss, an 18-year-old incoming freshman at the University of Tampa, 
typically logs around 6,000 text messages a month chatting to her friends. She 
thinks people who use text messaging every day will be more likely to report 
crimes that way, and the impersonal nature of text messaging will give more 
people her age the confidence to share information with authorities.

"It might take a while for people to know about it and get more comfortable 
with it, and for people to know it's really anonymous, and they're not going to 
get in trouble," she said.

Just like callers to a crime hot line, text tipsters can collect rewards for 
significant information. It's done with the cooperation of banks that hand over 
the cash - no questions asked - to people who present a code issued by police.

Officers acknowledge it may take time to get used to the text shorthand favored 
by younger people, who tend to LOL at the relative technological cluelessness 
of their parents' generation.

"We were kind of nervous about that, having to learn a new code language," 
Bernardi chuckled.

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 

*******************************
* POST TO [EMAIL PROTECTED] *
*******************************

Medianews mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to