The Problem
The list of challenges facing law enforcement is clearly extensive. Once the NIJ panel had identified the topics above, their underlying concerns were then ranked in order of importance. Not surprisingly, the issue that ranked as the number one priority for police chiefs was that law enforcement is challenged by growing volumes of digital evidence. Chiefs highlighted the fact that officer and investigator time spent in police stations was going up because officers were spending more time writing reports and reviewing and chasing evidence. This meant officers had less time to spend out on the street protecting the public. Chiefs on the panel identified the need to develop systems that automate and accelerate the review of evidence and generation of reports.
That panel was convened in 2018 and now, three years later, law enforcement is still faced with the same issue, except that the volume of digital evidence has grown at unprecedented rates. Industry experts estimate that 80% of evidence involved in an investigation is now digital. So, the strain on law enforcement resources remains ever present, with case backlogs growing, case resolution times expanding, budgets being impacted, collaboration being hampered and public safety at risk.
In today’s policing environments, the amount of digital evidence continues to grow, both in type and in size. Digital evidence now includes call logs, incident reports, images from officer-worn body cams and patrol car dash cams, cell phone evidence, computer evidence, arrest reports, and corrections systems records to name a few. Additionally, in today’s policing world, even physical evidence often produces digital evidence. For example, blood splatter or DNA analysis may produce images or reports that become evidence, or crime scene diagrams can become investigative evidence.
Law enforcement agencies find themselves needing digital evidence management solutions that can ingest, store, process, analyze, review, and share massive amounts of digital evidence that exists in a variety of formats, all while maintaining complete evidence chain of custody. In today’s digital world, there’s also the issue of providing a forum for the public to submit evidence from their mobile devices and, depending on the case, have access to authorized evidence.