
“We greatly appreciate the outstanding service and swift way Laserfiche® and TCi have handled our operational concerns.”
—Lieutenant Jack Ballentine, San Francisco Police
Police
work can sure look glamorous when TV and movie stars chase bad guys on
the streets of San Francisco. But for veteran SFPD Lieutenant Jack Ballentine,
the reality was a massive paper chase with stacks and stacks of police
reports waiting to be indexed, photocopied and distributed. Police reports
by the thousands were clogging the wheels of justice and creating delays
in readying criminal cases for court.
Ballentine’s staff was dwindling due to retirements, and it was
clearly time for the 150-year-old law enforcement agency to get smarter
with technology. He spearheaded an initiative to bring in document management
software from Laserfiche® and system integrators Technical Consultants
International (TCi).
Ballentine says, "We greatly appreciate the outstanding service and swift
way Laserfiche and TCi have handled our operational concerns." That review
comes after Laserfiche has only been on the job for a few weeks and only in
the records room at headquarters. The SFPD is starting off slowly as it attempts
to groom decades of data in electronic and paper forms into something more
manageable. There’s lots of room for improvement for their
record-keeping. It’s almost as paper-based now as it was 30 years ago. Each
day, the SFPD’s 2,300 officers add 1,500 new pages of reports, which quickly
accumulate into a massive paper problem. Every month the records room alone
goes through a pallet of paper – that’s 200,000 sheets."
So far, Laserfiche is used as an electronic data bank. In the past eight years,
the department has indexed and imaged nine million pages of police reports.
Untold millions more pages of paper reports are in filing cabinets throughout
the department.
An incident report is the initial item in what can be a
very long chain of documents – supplemental reports, evidence, statements
and more. Most of it starts out as paper but needs to be digitized right away
so it can be distributed to officers, attorneys and judges.
In San Francisco, most police reports are written on PCs installed in the
10 district police stations around the city. Sounds good so far, but then they’re
printed out and hand-delivered to the records room, where they are photocopied
and distributed on paper to the investigations bureau and the district attorney.
One set of paper reports is scanned and automatically indexed into Laserfiche. With a previous system, all the indexing was done manually by typing in a few pieces of information from the report, with lots of errors and wasted resources; so Laserfiche is already streamlining the process.

Another set of paper goes to clerical staff that key a bit more of the information
into the 70’s era mainframe system, which is shared with the court and district
attorney. A new records management system being adopted by the department
is still many months away. Until that system gets going, the most comprehensive
information is found in the images and searchable text in Laserfiche.
The next step will be giving access to reports in Laserfiche over the secure
public safety intranet, so inspectors and
district attorneys can locate the reports without leaving their desks. But the big leap will occur once the reports that officers
create on the police station computers can be automatically picked up, imaged
and indexed into Laserfiche without human intervention. It’s an easy technical
fix but a difficult bureaucratic challenge to get it done.
TCi Director of Professional Services Bill Bigley says there is still more
Laserfiche can do to streamline police work in the City by the Bay.
“San Francisco has many agencies that need to tap into this system,” Bigley
said, “including the district attorney’s office, the courts and the police
department’s own legal division. Eventually all SF Criminal Justice Agencies
could be given secure access to these records through the Web."
Lofty notions when you’re talking about big-city bureaucracies that have to sign off and then collaborate on such projects. But smaller departments and agencies across the country are doing exactly that.
In San Luis Obispo County, Laserfiche serves several hundred staff and officers
with the sheriff’s office, probation court, superior court and the police departments
from Arroyo Grande, Atascadero, Grover Beach, Morro Bay, Paso Robles, and Pismo
Beach. All send records to the county district attorney via Laserfiche. "It
certainly saves a lot of time that was spent driving the reports down here," said
Stephen Brown, the Chief Deputy District Attorney for SLO County.”
The Kern County Sheriff’s office is getting wired to the county courts system
via a password-protected, internet-accessible Laserfiche system that has cut
delivery time for court-issued restraining orders from days to minutes. "They
can have it literally in minutes," said Marc St. Laurent, who is supervising
document imaging for the Kern County Superior Court. "It helps to protect the
public and it helps protect potential victims from harm."
In Cowlitz County the courts have seen a drastic reduction in the amount
of paper work created there and they’ve used Laserfiche to streamline the workday
of everyone from the sheriff’s office to judges to defense attorneys. Judges
now have Laserfiche directly at the bench, meaning they can access complete
files from the clerk’s office with the click of a button. Soon, lawyers will
be able to access clients’ court files without leaving the office, courtesy
of the Web-available Laserfiche software. “I can’t imagine what it would have
been like if we hadn’t done this – we would have had a real nightmare,” said
Cowlitz County District Court Administrator Dee Wirkkala. “We were supposed
to start out with a limited scope and it’s working so well we keep adding more
and more and more to it.”
These are the sorts of services and testimonials San Francisco Law Enforcement
Agencies could be receiving as well, according to Bigley. “The key thing,” he
said, “is that Laserfiche enables more accurate information and makes that
information available to more agencies.”
Ballentine is all too aware of the possibilities, but sometimes revolutions come in baby steps. Regardless of how bright the future is, he’s happy for now to enjoy this new version of the present.
Said TCi’s Bill Bigley, “Seven or eight months ago there were 25,000 reports
sitting on a table because of inefficient processes – a huge backlog that affected
their staff, the public and the courts. Laserfiche has been a dramatic help
in reducing that, and it’s going to keep them from getting backlogged in the
future.”
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