Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Data-driven policing is the future for our city

- CHRIS MCMAHON chris.mcmahon@news.com.au

GOLD Coast policing’s immediate future is not going to involve Robocop officers or a nod to science fiction movies like Minority Report in which psychic technology can foresee crime.

It will be based instead on a highly mobile force, working across the district on assignment­s fed by intelligen­ce-led informatio­n.

But despite the absence of officers who are half robot, half cop, the crimebusti­ng future will in fact be driven by expansion of technology and how it is used by local police, both on the ground and combing through crime data to spot trends.

Policing on the Coast and across the state will also depend on laws police will have up their sleeve to tackle crime.

Opposition police spokesman Trevor Watts said the LNP would scour the world for best practice legislatio­n, like it did – he said – when it came up with the tough-on-bikies VLAD laws.

“The basic thrust of it is tough on crime. It’s easily said, not necessaril­y easily delivered. We know that a lot of crime comes out of two main threads – people who live their lives in chaos and people who are organised criminals,” Mr Watts said.

“We need a modern Queensland Police Service that is chasing down world’s best practices and implementi­ng in our environmen­t.

“It’s about looking at what’s working in other jurisdicti­ons around the world and what’s getting the results on the ground and implementi­ng those.

“Sometimes there will be a legislativ­e solution, a training solution, a resources solution, sometimes it might be committing into action.

“If we use the bikie legislatio­n … the LNP’s bikie legislatio­n when it was introduced was the same legislatio­n that was used to control the gangs of New York. That’s where it came from and it obviously had great effect here.

“For us, it is about making sure we have legislatio­n that is usable, that upholds the community standard, that allows the police to do their job in an efficient and effective way, and we’ll be looking all around the world for world best practice legislatio­n that enables police and a modern police force to do their very best job.”

Recently appointed Gold Coast Assistant Commission­er Brian Wilkins said technology would play a major role in how the district was policed.

“The future is in the expansion of our technology and our mobility,” Mr Wilkins said.

“This increase will give us more time on the frontline. Our overall focus is community safety and to achieve that is the ability of officers to be on the frontline … at the right place, at the right time.

“They’re doing their business, which is intelligen­ce-led and the strategies that we utilise are evidence based. We don’t just guess what we’re doing.

“So we’re not just going somewhere and aimlessly driving around or just doing stuff, you’re actually using evidenceba­sed strategies to address the issue.”

Mr Wilkins said there would not be a beat cop on the Gold Coast who would prefer to sit in front of a computer writing up reports instead of out on the streets.

“Cops don’t like sitting in front of computers typing reports. If we can directly input whilst in the field, and finalise a particular matter and not have to return to the station and sit in front of a computer for two hours...

“Most cops want to be on the street working with and helping the community and increasing our mobility actually enables us to do that.

“Ideally the only time a cop would have to attend a police establishm­ent is to come in and kit up and then spend their full shift in the field and then come back to the station and de-kit. All the necessary correspond­ence is done in the field and then they finish their shift and go home.

“They’ve got the capability to spend their full shift in the field.”

Police Minister Mark Ryan agreed mobility and technology, along with proper resourcing, would play a crucial part in the future of policing.

“The Queensland Police Service is moving towards a model of policing that emphasises greater mobility and flexibilit­y in the allocation of personnel and resources to generate faster response times,” he said.

“The net result of these innovation­s is that members of the community will see more police out and about on the streets more often.

“Officers on the Gold Coast are also benefiting from the Queensland Police Service’s

 ??  ?? “The world of law enforcemen­t on the Gold Coast is moving quickly.” Rapid Action Patrol officers
“The world of law enforcemen­t on the Gold Coast is moving quickly.” Rapid Action Patrol officers

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