News and insight into biometric identification and authentication

Indiana police launches biometric system for bookings

Friday, October 28, 2011

The Noble County Sheriff’s Department in Indiana has launched an iris recognition-based biometric system designed to collect iris data in addition to the fingerprint data already collected from suspects being booked at the department, according to a WANE article.

The system, which was designed and provided by biometric technology developer BI2 Technologies, will only collect and store biometric data from criminals.


Indiana is one of the latest states to receive the system from BI2. Some 46 other states have also implemented the same system as Indiana over the past 5-years.

Noble County Sheriff Doug Harp first saw the technology at this year’s annual Sheriff’s Conference as he saw the technology to be a particularly helpful tool in tracking sex offenders who frequently try to give false information in an effort to avoid being tracked.

Harp hopes to see other agencies throughout the state employ the same technology so the shared database in state would become that much more of a valuable tool for police officers identifying suspects of crimes.

Read the full story here[end] 

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) announced that it intends to replace its Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS), reports the La Junta Tribune Democrat.

The 20-year old system contains almost 2.7 million master fingerprint records and is one of the oldest statewide law enforcement agency systems in the U.S. and can no longer keep up with demand. The system was designed to process 700 fingerprint cards in a 24 hour period, but today 1,000 to 1,500 fingerprint cards are put through the system.

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The Hong Kong Police Force (HKPF) has awarded a 10-year contract to 3M Cogent to provide high-resolution LiveScan booking systems and biometric identification products, using tenprint and palm print scans in accordance with the HKPF’s ANSI/NIST standard.

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Two Texas police departments have successfully used live fingerprint scans to serve a warrant in conjunction with a 15-year-old murder case.

The Carrollton and Lewisville, Tex. police departments used Plano-based Mentalix Inc.’s Submit live scan system to nab the suspect, Danny Elenilson Osorio. Lewisville police officers stopped Osorio in March on suspicion of driving while intoxicated. Osorio gave a fake name and birth date, and police arrested him and took him to the Lewisville jail.

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M2SYS Technology has released an Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS) that enables the storage, search, retrieval, processing and editing of biometric data and subject records. The new system is built on multi-modal architecture, enabling users to combine the biometric matching of a fingerprint with that of an iris, face or palm print.

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