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Criminal IntelligenceGIS Solutions for Intelligence Analysis
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Applying GIS Technology to Criminal IntelligenceIntelligent Tools, Intelligent Maps, and Intelligent Decisions for Law Enforcement
Today’s law enorcement and public saety personnel must be
knowledge-based workers. From the police chie to the detective
to the intelligence analyst, you need inormation to quickly gain
awareness and understanding o events within and across jurisdic-
tions. Geographic inormation system (GIS) technology provides
the tools to collect, analyze, and disseminate inormation quickly
and easily. By adding GIS to your capabilities, you can transorm
your data into actionable intelligence.
ArcGIS ® analytic tools can be applied to identify vulnerabilities for amissile attack around an airport.
Using ArcGIS ModelBuilder TM
, the Lincoln Police Department is able toanalyze crime incidents and crime density.
Every crime starts with a location. GIS helps you leverage the
location o events, people, and critical inrastructure to analyze,
understand, and build solutions to the challenges you ace.
GIS provides an enterprise approach to help you meet your
short-term and long-term crime-fghting and homeland security
needs. Use GIS to address immediate tactical challenges by link-
ing and identiying the location o potential suspects or urther
investigation. GIS can also be used to develop a comprehensive
picture o crime or threats in a community. Its sophisticated
analytic tools reveal crime patterns or potential trends over
time. Data can then be integrated rom multiple sources to
plan where and what types o resources should be deployed to
prevent crime or disrupt threats.
Real World
Incident Analysis
Risks and Hazards
Resource Allocation
Critical Infrastructure
Routing and Tracking
Station Locations
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The Intelligence Life CycleThe Geographic Advantage TM for Crime Prevention and Response
Intelligence analysis derives meaning from diverse data and complex analysis. By leveraging the geographic component of your crime
intelligence, you gain insight and value for the entire intelligence life cycle. You can effectively gather and analyze intelligence from
multiple sources. Results can be quickly and easily disseminated using highly intuitive information—maps. A GIS can help you with the
challenges you face by
• Focusingdataneedsandrequirementsonacommonplatform
• Supportingdatacollectionandaggregationfrommultipleagencies
• Providingtoolsfordatadiscoveryfrommultiplesources
• Integratingdatatoimproveoverallintelligence
• Analyzinginformationtosupportofcersandinvestigatorsintheeld
• Establishinganeffectivemethodforexchangingintelligenceacrossmultiplejurisdictions
• Capturingbusinessprocessesandworkowstoidentifybestpracticesandnecessaryimprovements
Integrating and Analyzing
Information in a Common
Framework for Greater Insight
Disseminating Intelligence for
Actionable Knowledge
Providing a Platform
to View Crime Threats
and Alerts
Providing Tools and Capabilities
to Prepare and Transform Data
into Information
Collecting
Raw Data in
the Field to
Understand
the Problem
Needs
Dissemination Collection
Processing and ExploitationAnalysis and Production
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Meeting the Homeland Security MissionHomeland Security Is a Shared Responsibility
Good policing is vital to protecting your community as well
as the nation. This requires an all-hazard approach, having
people, procedures, and technology in place to handle both
man-made and natural disasters. Proper intelligence tools
coupled with geographic inormation provide the ability to
analyze data to display and disseminate a common operating
picture (COP). GIS can help you by providing analytic tools to
transorm data, a secure environment or collaboration andinormation exchange, and a platorm that can support you as
you take your intelligence into the feld.
Plume Modeling and Analysis for Training and Response
Integrated
Common Analytical
Viewer (iCAV)
provides the
Depar tment of
Homeland
Security with a
common geospatial
picture.
Buffer Zone Protection Analysis for Critical Infrastructure Protection
GIS benefits homeland security by
• Analyzingandimprovingresponsecapabilities
• Locatingpersonnel,assets,andresources
• Identifyingcriticalinfrastructureandvulnerabilities• Developingtrainingandevaluationscenarios
• Establishingreal-timesituationalawareness
• Creatingacommonoperatingpicture
• Improvingthetimelinessandqualityofdecisionsupport
• Developinghigher-qualitycontingencyplansthatare
easy to access
• Conductingdatafusionandintelligenceanalysis
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GIS and Law Enforcement IntelligenceImplementing GIS for Effective Planning and Resource Allocation
The Arizona Counter Terrorism Investigation Center applies GIS for
critical infrastructure assessment and protection.
The United States Postal Service uses GIS to detect and deter
money-laundering activity.
The Strathclyde Police in
Scotland apply GIS in the
follow-up investigation to the
attempted Glasgow Airport
bombing of June 30, 2007.
Law enorcement agencies today conront complex challenges.
Policing requires more than responding to a crime scene or working
quickly to close a case and apprehend an oender. Law enorce-
ment requires proactive, intelligence-led policing to eectively
support planning and resource allocation. GIS provides an integrated
platorm or all types o data. Law enorcement agencies can use
spatial analysis and visualization to aid in decision making at all
levels throughout the agency.
GIS provides an inormation-based method supporting all roles and
aspects o law enorcement.
Officer, Detective, or Squad Supervisor
Ofcers, detectives, or squad supervisors use GIS to access
intelligence inormation rom their desktop or mobile computers
to enhance feld investigations and more accurately target crime.
Command Staff
Commanders examine crime patterns and threats over time or a
specifc location or across a community. They can gain accurate
assessments or the tactical deployment o sta and resources.
Chief of Police or Intelligence Director
GIS provides a chie o police or intelligence director with
a comprehensive view or long-term decision making.
Predictive crime models can also be used or developing
comprehensive, strategic plans.
Intelligence Analyst
Intelligence analysts use GIS as a platorm or applying
tools and methods to support the entire intelligence
analysis lie cycle rom planning and collection to analysis,
dissemination, and evaluation.
The police use GIS to efficientl y conduct their search, looking for additional
evidence captured on surveillance cameras.
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Copyright © 2008 ESRI. All rights reserved. ESRI, the ESRI globe logo, ArcMap, ArcIno, ModelBuilder, ArcGIS, ArcEditor, ArcPad, Community, ArcGlobe, StreetMap, ArcToolbox, 3D Analyst, The GeographicAdvantage, @esri.com, and www.esri.com are trademarks, registered trademarks, or service marks o ESRI in the United States, the European Community, or certain other jurisdictions. Other companies and
products mentioned herein may be trademarks or registered trademarks o their respective trademark owners.
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ArcGIS: The Complete Enterprise GISWhether you need to perorm spatial analysis, manage large
amounts o spatial data, or produce cartographically appeal-
ing maps to aid in decision making, ArcGIS® allows you to use
one common platorm to meet all your GIS needs. And because
ArcGIS is built using technology standards, it will integrate well
with your existing systems.ArcGIS is a complete system or authoring, serving, and using
geographic inormation. It is an integrated collection o GIS
sotware products or building and deploying a complete GIS
wherever it is needed—on desktops or servers, in custom
applications, over the Web, or in the feld.
Learn more about GIS or criminal intelligence at
www.esri.com/publicsafety.
1-800-GIS-XPRT (1-800-447-9778)
www.esri.com
Locate an ESRI value-added reseller
near you at
www.esri.com/resellers
For More Inormation
ESRI
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