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A
Deputy Sheriff spots a car roll through a red light
and pulls the car over. There are two occupants inside.
After reviewing the registration information the deputy
approaches the vehicle. Upon contact, the vehicle operator
claims he forgot his ID, and gives the deputy a name
and Social Security number, which comes back as blank.
Upon detaining the subject, the deputy takes a fingerprint
to check against iLincs. This time, two possible warrants,
with photos of the subject and the warrant documents,
are returned. Unable to refute his identity, the subject
admits his guilt. The second occupant appears as a known
associate of the subject and is found to have outstanding
warrants as well. Both subjects are transported directly
to jail.
Click here to view larger
picture. |
Officers
responding to a call about a missing child use a digital
camera to capture a picture of the girl from a framed
photo provided by the girl’s mother. Back at the patrol
car, the officer creates a Missing Child record in iLincs
and uploads the image from the camera into the file.
An Alert then appears on the Department’s Missing Children
“hot list.” The child’s picture is now available in
cruisers throughout the area. Two hours later the girl
is located at the mall and returned home. All officers
who received the Alert are instantly notified that the
child has been found. Click
here to view larger picture. |

Officers
respond to a call reporting a suspicious person loitering
around the Children’s Discovery Museum. When approached,
the suspect provides an ID, which checks out. The officer
enters a digital field intelligence report in iLincs
to document the contact, adding a picture of the suspect
and a fingerprint. This information is immediately available
to all other departments linked by the iLincs system.
Two weeks later, it is used by another agency to accurately
identify the suspect, who provided a fake ID after being
stopped and questioned for attempted kidnapping. Click here
to view larger picture. |
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