"In a single click, it gives a citizen a chance to send in a crime tip," said Dan Elliott, who developed the application for his software company,
iThinqWare
. "And they can do it anonymously. It's a big difference from the way we did things the old way, and the way we do things the new way."
The mobile app was first used by the Dallas Police Department beginning in October 2010. Elliott said that in the intervening year, Dallas police received 1,600 crime tips and made 67 felony arrests because of people using the app to send in information. Since then, 68 other police and sheriff's departments nationwide, he said, have launched their own "iWatch" applications, including, Los Angeles; Duluth, Minn.; Harris County, Texas; Grapevine, Texas; and Orange, Calif.
Elliott said that he developed the app after his own brushes with crime. About a decade ago, the fiancee of his brother was murdered after her car mechanic broke into her home, and, more recently, he lost his wallet in a stick-up.
The app also tells police your location if you hit the "Call 911" selection if your phone has embedded GPS location data. Also, when you call in a voice message after selecting "Call Tip Line," the cops get a text version of your call.
It's available for the Android and Apple's iPhone. An application for the Blackberry phone will be available in a few days, Elliott said. In addition, it's possible to visit the iWatchBridgeport.com website and submit a tip in a similar manner by clicking on the "If You See Something Say Something" box.