New Law Review Article: Policing By the Numbers: Big Data and the Fourth Amendment

New Law Review Article: Elizabeth Joh, Policing By the Numbers: Big Data and the Fourth Amendment, 89 Wash. L. Rev. 35 (2014):

The age of “big data” has come to policing. In Chicago, police officers are paying particular attention to members of a “heat list”: those identified by a risk analysis as most likely to be involved in future violence. In Charlotte, North Carolina, the police have compiled foreclosure data to generate a map of high-risk areas that are likely to be hit by crime. In New York City, the N.Y.P.D. has partnered with Microsoft to employ a “Domain Awareness System” that collects and links information from sources like CCTVs, license plate readers, radiation sensors, and informational databases. In Santa Cruz, California, the police have reported a dramatic reduction in burglaries after relying upon computer algorithms that predict where new burglaries are likely to occur. The Department of Homeland Security has applied computer analytics to Twitter feeds to find words like “pipe bomb,” “plume,” and “listeria.”
Big data has begun to transform government in fields as diverse as public health, transportation management, and scientific research. The analysis of what were once unimaginable quantities of digitized data is likely to introduce dramatic changes to a profession which, as late as 1900, involved little more than an able-bodied man who was given a hickory club, a whistle, and a key to a call box. Real-time access to and analysis of vast quantities of information found in criminal records, police databases, and surveillance data may alter policing in the same way that big data has revolutionized areas as diverse as presidential elections, internet commerce, and language translation. Some have even heralded big data’s potential to change our assumptions about social relationships, government, scientific study, and even knowledge itself. (footnotes omitted)

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