Subscribe to the Free Print Edition!
Celebrating 25 Years

Thinking global

By Joab Jackson, GCN Staff

Ex-trooper McCreary gets federal, state and local law enforcement agencies together on data-sharing

The challenge? Get a wide range of law enforcement organizations to solve a problem as technically and politically thorny as sharing information across multiple legacy systems.

The kicker? Persuade them to get on board and modify their own programs without offering much—or, in some cases, any—financial assistance.

Such a task requires considerable diplomacy, empathy and industriousness. Those words, colleagues say, also describe James Patrick McCreary, a senior adviser at the Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Assistance.

As much as any single person can be responsible for the success of a large federal initiative, McCreary has shepherded into existence the Global Justice XML Data Model, a data dictionary for sharing criminal justice information. In the age of failed information sharing projects, Global JXDM’s success has been impressive. It’s used by more than 200 state, local and federal criminal justice and law enforcement agencies.

First-hand experience at the local law-enforcement level has helped. Prior to coming to Justice, he was a trooper for the Indiana State Police for 21 years.

“His work with the Global group has been instrumental in helping define the data formats,” said Steve Correll, executive director of the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, a state-funded system that lets police officers get information from other states on criminal suspects.

Setting a standard

Although NLETS itself had been in place for more than 30 years, the Global JXDM program made enough sense to spur NLETS to redo its proprietary system—which handles 41 million transactions per month—to talk in the Global JXDM tongue.

Global JXDM is overseen by the Global Justice Information Sharing Initiative, a Justice Department-run coalition of law enforcement agencies that oversees information sharing projects. McCreary serves as the federal contact, working with local, state and tribal agencies, national associations, academic institutions, private companies and other agencies.

“The state and local people have always been looking for some leadership from the federal partners, and Pat has stepped up and said, ‘Hey, we may not be able to give you all the funding, but we can certainly point you in the right direction,’ ” Correll said.

In 2001, when the project was getting under way, it was clear to IT program managers that the Extensible Markup Language would be the common language to tie together criminal justice systems. The problem was that many, diverse XML projects were already started. In effect, the law enforcement community was building an XML Tower of Babel.



GCN Popup