e-News Sign-up

PoliceMag.com offers a selection of FREE e-newsletters. Get news and information about topics important to you.

  • OnTarget - Sent to you weekly. General law enforcement news.
  • Firearms & Tactics - Sent to you every other week. Training tips and news on the gun market.
  • Patrol Tactics - Sent to you weekly. Timely information for street cops.
  • Recruit - Sent to you monthly. Advice for the aspiring officer.
  • SWAT - Sent to you weekly. Techniques for tactical team members and leaders.
  • Trainers and Training - Sent to you monthly. Tips, techniques, and advice to help you improve your training and stretch your training dollar.

Web Poll

Are you concerned about your personal job security due to the current state of the economy?


Top News

May 9 2003

Top News

Neighborhood Watch Goes Online

Internet technology is allowing citizens to help police catch criminals.

“Over the last few years there’s been a lot more use of citizens in police work,” explains Jacqueline Helfgott, associate professor of criminal justice at Seattle University in Washington state. “Police cannot do it all, so now the Internet can help citizens get involved with their community’s police force.”

Police in the small town of Fairmont, Minn., posted a most wanted list on the department’s Website and publicized the site in the newspaper. Four of the ten people posted were apprehended in the first week with the help of citizens’ tips.

In Medina, Wash., a bedroom community east of Seattle, Chief Michael Knapp created a Community E-Lert program, which sends e-mails to 1,200 subscribers in the area.

“It changes policing because we involve the community in a partnership – in addressing the criminal problems of our city,” Knapp says. “When you do that you’re going to become more efficient.”

E-Lerts have also encouraged citizens, Knapp says, to give police feedback on what they think of police work in their community.

Bill Berger, North Miami Beach, Fla., and a past president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, believes the nature of the Internet encourages more citizen involvement.

“A lot of times people don’t want to get involved,” he says. “But something about the anonymity of the Internet makes citizen participation easier. They can e-mail information, say to us, ‘Here – check this out.’ It’s almost like it creates a veil, an extra level of distance and safety.”

Tags:

Feedback

No feedback found

Write Feedback

Please log in to write feedback.

New user? Sign up for new membership now!

Get Your FREE Trial Issue and Win a Gift! Subscribe Today!
Yes! Please rush me my FREE TRIAL ISSUE of POLICE magazine and FREE Officer Survival Guide with tips and tactics to help me safely get out of 10 different situations.

Just fill in the form to the right and click the button to receive your FREE Trial Issue.

If POLICE does not satisfy you, just write "cancel" on the invoice and send it back. You'll pay nothing, and the FREE issue is yours to keep. If you enjoy POLICE, pay only $25 for a full one-year subscription (12 issues in all). Enjoy a savings of over 60% off the cover price!
It's easy! Just fill in the form below and click the red button to receive your FREE Trial Issue.
First Name:
Last Name:
Rank:
Agency:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
We respect your privacy. Please let us know if the address provided is your home, as your RANK / AGENCY will not be included on the mailing label.
E-mail Address:

Enewsletter Subscription:
Offer valid in US only. Outside U.S., click here.
COPYRIGHT © 2008 POLICE Magazine. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.