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Celebrating 25 Years

Prints on patrol: Minnesota county puts fingerprint system into squad cars

By Trudy Walsh, GCN Staff

About 40 percent of motorists stopped by police in Minnesota don’t have proper identification, such as a driver’s license. And on not-so-rare occasions, people don’t give their real names.

“Sometimes officers would let someone go and find out later that they released a seriously wanted individual,” said Kevin Johnson, program manager at Identix Inc. of Minnetonka, Minn.

The officers had to rely on a cop’s intuition—a vital but not infallible resource.

Three years ago, the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office decided to supplement its officers’ intuition with wireless handheld devices that interface with an Automated Fingerprint Identification System database on a secure server at the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.

Working with the bureau, the Sheriff’s Office began testing the Integrated Biometric Identification System in November 2001. IBIS runs on adapted Hewlett-Packard iPaq handheld PCs under the Microsoft Pocket PC operating system.

A unit “looks kind of like a DustBuster,” said Jerry Olson, project manager with the Minnesota bureau. The part of a DustBuster that produces suction roughly parallels the location of IBIS’ fingerprint scanner, an optical sensor with a glass platen.

The unit also has a small, high-resolution analog National Television System Committee standard camera. The camera captures fingerprint images from the platen. The IBIS unit can be plugged into a squad car’s cigarette lighter or run on camcorder batteries.

When an officer fingerprints someone, he can preview the print quality with the Identix software before he transmits it to the wireless server. If a print has too much moisture, for example, it will show up only as a blob. If the finger is too dry, the skin won’t contact the platen adequately.

The Identix screen capture software saves the print as a 500-dpi image, in accordance with National Institute of Standards and Technology digital fingerprint standards.

Using software from Dynamic Imaging Systems Inc. of Marlton, N.J., a camera subunit also can take digital mug shots and transmit them wirelessly. The IBIS server initially was a Dell PowerEdge 2650 running Java2 Enterprise Edition and using Cellular Digital Packet Data connections over a frame relay network. In the past year, the wireless portion has been upgraded to the movianVPN virtual private network client from Certicom Corp. of Mississauga, Ontario, and Mobility software from NetMotion Wireless Inc. of Seattle.

IBIS needs only two prints, from the left and right index fingers. It can match them against fingerprints stored in law enforcement databases, using Omnitrak AFIS tools from Printrak International Inc. of Anaheim, Calif., a division of Motorola Inc.