California Police Chief- Fall 2013 CPCA_2017_Winter Magazine Final | Page 18

GETTING STARTED :

THE CRITICAL FIRST STEP FOR IMPLEMENTING AN INTELLIGENCE-LED POLICING MODEL
By : Daniel ( D . J .) Seals

Compiling many different information sources is key to making intelligence-led policing work . So many times police departments are satisfied and content with the information they currently have . We tend to live in an informational world contained within the four walls of our departments , ignoring outside informational sources . Obviously the most immediate source of information will be your in house records management system which should be used in conjunction with those notebooks your officers keep with them on the road . Those little notebooks very rarely get included in your department ' s intelligence data , but are very often the most accurate source of direct intelligence involving the daily workings of your community .

Unfortunately , there still seems to be a divide between county Sheriff ’ s departments and municipal Police Departments , floating an ideal of “ us and them ”. This must be broken down in order to compile the next most important data set ; that of your neighboring agencies . The criminal element within your jurisdiction does not stop committing crimes because they come to your city / county limits . We all understand that our criminals are also our neighboring agencies criminals . Criminals are irrespective of jurisdictional lines and do not care what color uniform you wear . As a matter of fact , it is in the criminal ’ s best interest to move their criminal escapades around . They know we do not share information as freely as we should . We must combat this by breaking down the informational barriers between departments . By sharing local intelligence , we can finally act as one law enforcement body and not individual agencies .
After you have a grasp and have taken full advantage of all of your local intelligence sources , it is time to ... yes
I am going to say it … reach out to your state and federal sources . If we thought the perceived divide between local agencies was wide , then the perceived divide between local agencies and state and federal agencies must be the Grand Canyon . However , since 9 / 11 , state and federal agencies have begun to understand the great impact local intelligence has on national security . Case in point ; it was discovered , after the fact , that the terrorists involved in 9 / 11 drove through the state of Georgia . Not only did they drive through , they were traffic-stopped a number of times . Even though some of the terrorists were already on a national watch list , they were never flagged because so many of our smaller local systems were not directly linked with the national system . Reach out to your state and local agencies , join their intelligence sharing meetings / e-mail servers , and don ’ t just read what they send out - contribute !
Would 9 / 11 have happened as it was planned had one of those traffic stops flagged the terrorists ? Have we really moved on toward sharing intelligence ? What steps are you taking ? Are they really forward steps , or just “ going through the motions ”? It is up to you to reach out to all possible intelligence sources , compile them , make that information accessible to your stakeholders and put intelligence-led policing into action ! ■
Read more from this six part series at : www . motorolasolutions . com / freshideas where Daniel Seals will continue to discuss the value of intelligence-led policing and how to get your agency started down the path of more data-driven policing .
18 California Police Chief | www . californiapolicechiefs . org