West Yorks Police Use Galaxy Note 3 To Speed Up Crime Reports

West Yorkshire Police officers are to use mobile devices to simplify and speed up the process of reporting crimes in a bid to reduce costs and improve efficiency as government cuts loom large.

Four thousand Samsung Galaxy Note 3 phablets will be issued to police officers and other members of staff and will replace traditional pen and paper note books. An ‘e-notebook’ will be used to record information and crimes can be reported using a secure online app that removes the need for police to return to the station.

Officials claim the deployment is one of the “biggest technological deployments in modern policing” and will free officers to spend more time on the street, dealing with crime and public safety.

Police go mobile

Yvette-Cooper police leadWest Yorkshire Police says it is committed to providing the best possible service to local communities using mobile technology, which will help it deal with a £160 million reduction in funding between 2010 and 2016.

“Officers will be able to enter electronic witness statements and complete missing person forms without having to put pen to paper back at base,” explained Andy Battle, assistant chief constable. “Similarly, the device will allow users to view and update incidents whilst on the beat, increasing our visibility, responsiveness and presence on the streets.

“According to a national audit conducted in 2012 which looked at mobile working in policing across the UK, an average of 18 minutes of additional time on the streets was generated. From a West Yorkshire perspective, one minute of extra time on the street per officer, per day equates to a million pounds worth of additional policing annually.”

Earlier this year the Metropolitan Police announced an ambitious £200 million IT transformation plan that makes use of cloud and social media services and equips thousands of officers with mobile devices. Between 500 and 600 iPad Minis were ordered as part of a trial, but the Met indicated a wider choice of non-Apple devices would be offered as the plan progressed.

Do you know all about public sector IT – the triumph and the tragedy? Take our quiz!

Steve McCaskill

Steve McCaskill is editor of TechWeekEurope and ChannelBiz. He joined as a reporter in 2011 and covers all areas of IT, with a particular interest in telecommunications, mobile and networking, along with sports technology.

Recent Posts

France Fines Apple Over Ad Tracking Feature

Apple fined 150m euros over App Tracking Transparency feature that it says abuses Apple's market…

11 hours ago

OpenAI To Release Open-Weight AI Model

OpenAI to release customisable open-weight model in coming months as it faces pressure from open-source…

11 hours ago

Samsung AI Fridge Creates Shopping Lists, Adjusts AC

Samsung's Bespoke AI-powered fridge monitors food to create shopping lists, displays TikTok videos, locates misplaced…

12 hours ago

Huawei Consumer Revenues Surge Amidst Smartphone Comeback

Huawei sees 38 percent jump in consumer revenues as its smartphone comeback continues to gather…

12 hours ago

China Approves First ‘Flying Car’ Licences

In world-first, China approves commercial flights for EHang autonomous passenger drone, paving way for imminent…

13 hours ago

Microsoft Shutters Shanghai Lab In Latest China Pullback

Microsoft closes down IoT and AI lab it operated in Shanghai tech district in latest…

13 hours ago