The journey of an address in the Police system

28 Jan 2020 02:00 PM

Blog posted by: Gayle Gander, Head of Marketing at GeoPlace, with Olivia Powell, GIS Manager at Avon & Somerset Constabulary, 28 January 2020.

Police forces use addresses and location information in almost every aspect of law enforcement; from keeping accurate records on the addresses of victims and witnesses or suspects and offenders, to using the exact location of a crime or incident to verify an alibi, or to subsequently shape a crime-prevention policy.

At the GeoPlace annual conference in 2019, Olivia Powell presented a clear and concise vision of ‘The journey of an address in the Police system‘. The presentation resonated with attendees and we were asked for more information on how the Police utilise addressing. Following the conference, GeoPlace published Olive’s presentation as a case study and we worked together to design an infographic which demonstrates the flow of an address through from deployment to record transfer.

Olivia Powell presenting at the GeoPlace 2019 conference

Addresses created by local councils and collated by GeoPlace are made available to the emergency services via Ordnance Survey’s AddressBase range of products.  Here’s the ‘journey of an address in the police system’, or ‘how council addresses and locations assist the police nationally’ as told by Olivia Powell, GIS Manager, Avon & Somerset Police.

We face challenges every day

The police have core operational duties which include:

  1. protecting life and property
  2. preserving order
  3. preventing the commission of offences
  4. bringing offenders to justice.

Our police forces do an incredible job, responding to reports of criminal activity, mitigating risk, following up on antisocial behaviour, liaising with the public, and providing support for rehabilitation – location plays an important role in this mix.

A precise and comprehensive geospatial reference is important in almost every aspect of law enforcement, and the ability to standardise records and correlate locations precisely is essential: more and more, law enforcement agencies are seeing the UPRN as the common denominator that links disparate aspects of their work together.

“Location is at the heart of everything we do . By using a authoritative and referenced address database with UPRN right across our workstreams, in every part of our work, we hope to be more efficient and effective in serving our community by bringing down crime levels,  increasing our responsiveness

Olivia Powell, GIS Manager at Avon & Somerset Constabulary

From keeping accurate records on the addresses of victims and witnesses or suspects and offenders, to using the exact location of a crime to verify an alibi, or to subsequently shape a crime-prevention policy – this means it’s crucial that location details stored in an interoperable, secure way, and that the source – our National Gazetteers – are kept up to date.

The journey of an address in the Police system

‘We find solutions by bringing location to life‘

Whether we realise it or not, as the people protected and served by law enforcement, we often provide the first and most important location point in a sequence of connected events. The first report of incident is the trigger for a long series of locations that may or may not need to be connected. For example:

UPRNs are key

By using AddressBase Premium and UPRNs to confirm and correlate incidents, and any persons involved, law enforcement agencies can share information (when appropriate and required)  with each other in complete confidence, knowing that the data has been authoritatively referenced. This speeds up the work of the police, and makes the service more effective in protecting citizens.

Olivia Powell presented this subject at the GeoPlace conference. On our website you can see slides and listen to the audio of her presentation. A downloadable version of this article is here and the infographic ‘The journey of an address in the Police system’ is available here.