Elevating policing with smart technology.
How one sheriff’s department in Missouri leveraged smartphones and our unparalleled 5G network to increase safety, decrease costs, and improve community relations.
5 minute read
How one sheriff’s department in Missouri leveraged smartphones and our unparalleled 5G network to increase safety, decrease costs, and improve community relations.
5 minute read
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Law enforcement agencies across the country face a vast range of challenges every day. From community expectations and higher public scrutiny to low staffing levels and limited budgets, even the most robust departments are searching for ways to improve morale and increase operational efficiencies. By leveraging smartphones to access online platforms, police departments are finding that officers can accomplish more in the field, making for faster investigations, safer emergency responses, improved community relations, and lower overhead costs.
That’s been the case in Monroe County, Missouri, where Sheriff Joe Colston has adopted mobile technology to maximize his department’s capabilities. With just nine full-time sworn deputies covering nearly 700 rural square miles, Colston needed to ensure his deputies had sufficient equipment to communicate, access information, and complete reports in the field.
Before becoming sheriff, Colston served as chief deputy, where he valued the utility of his department-issued smartphone. After reading about a pilot program at the Chicago Police Department (CPD) that used smartphones for in-vehicle computing, he thought he could stretch the smartphone’s utility further by leveraging cost-effective mobile technology as a force multiplier. Eventually, with the help of a local law enforcement block grant, Colston brought the same mobile infrastructure CPD was using to Monroe County: Samsung smartphones paired with DeX workstations.
With the new devices, Colston’s department became the first law enforcement agency in the country to use smartphones as their primary computing devices in patrol vehicles, field operations, and the office. The devices can collect photographic evidence and act as body-worn cameras while retaining full smartphone functionality. They can then dock with a larger touchscreen monitor and keyboard, providing the equivalent of an in-vehicle computer, which also doubles as an office-based computer. Officers can use their phone seamlessly across working environments, whether it be in a vehicle or at the office. This mobility helps deputies collect, share, access, and analyze mission-critical information; communicate with each other, supervisors, and other agencies; and maintain enhanced situational awareness.
“It’s been really helpful to be able to log into the system and see pieces of the puzzle that are relevant to what we’re doing. We’re collecting more data, and the more information you have while you’re in the field, the more effective you can be.”
Sheriff Joe Colston, Monroe County Sheriff’s Office
“From my personal experience doing investigations, it’s been really helpful to be able to log into the system and see pieces of the puzzle that are relevant to what we’re doing,” Colston says. “We’re collecting more data, and the more information you have while you’re in the field, the more effective you can be.”
For example, the county’s 911 system uses a computer-aided dispatch that meshes with the DeX system and allows deputies to see calls from virtually anywhere and in real time, including mapped location data that provides turn-by-turn directions to incidents. The web-based records management system (RMS) is similarly integrated, meaning deputies can rely on a single device to access both systems.
Fewer trips back to the office and more time in the field increases community engagement and ultimately helps deter crime. It also gives deputies the ability to file reports remotely while information is still fresh in their minds. And phone-based AI features support live translation. The department has realized numerous other benefits, outlined below.
Of course, none of this is possible without the right network coverage. Like in other rural areas, the lack of full wireless coverage in Monroe County was a big concern for Colston as he considered making the leap to smartphone-based computing. But after connecting with
“5G has done just what we hoped—delivering a much faster transfer of videos from the field and facilitating live-streaming of body-worn camera video when needed.”
Sheriff Joe Colston, Monroe County Sheriff’s Office
“Our mobile experience and operational capabilities improved significantly,” he says. “And 5G has done just what we hoped—delivering a much faster transfer of videos from the field and facilitating live-streaming of body-worn camera video when needed.” Indeed, the connectivity is reliable enough that fixed 5G internet from
Like Chicago, the second-largest municipal police agency in the country, Monroe County is finding out just how much mobile technology can unlock for its forces—right down to the station house doors Colston routinely opens with his smartphone. Though the challenges facing smaller cities and rural areas are not always the same as those faced by big metropolitan areas, each can use technology to access the right solution at the right time.
“I’m proud of our project and what we’ve been able to do with technology,” Colston says. “By embracing this transformative shift, we’ve not only enhanced our operational capabilities, but we have also managed to save taxpayers in this county thousands of dollars.”
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