Lukens quickly realized that the Alliance PD didn’t have the monetary or personnel resources he needed to do the job in the way he wanted to do it. So he threw a Hail Mary pass for more funding.
Hoping to get high-tech resources that would maximize his officers’ productivity, in 2021, Lukens applied for a grant from the state of Nebraska. And he got $500,000. “I was the only one that applied,” he says, adding that the state wasn’t exactly keen on giving that much money to his agency. “They wouldn’t approve it until like the last day the grant was available. Then I had to scramble and get everything purchased in six weeks.”
Because of the grant Alliance now has mobile and stationary license plate recognition systems, motion-operated surveillance cameras in areas like parks, new software, and other tools.
Alliance was not a hotbed of crime before Lukens won the grant. But it did have some problems he used the technology to address. The seat of Box Butte County, Alliance is a banking and business center for the area’s smaller communities. Lukens says when he first became chief, the city had a higher crime rate than a community of its population size is expected to have. “Our property crime is now down 38% and our crimes against persons rate has dropped 5%.”
And technology is being used for more than just crime prevention in Alliance. Lukens says Alliance PD has implemented technology that’s designed to both enhance community safety and improve community
relations.