SAN FRANCISCO – The final stages are near completion for the launch of a law enforcement social media network designed exclusively for the men and women in blue.
Created by former high-profile New York City police commissioner and Los Angeles Police Chief Bill Bratton, BlueLine is being touted as a site where officers can share their expertise, insight and information securely through video, instant messaging and videoconferencing.
The network is scheduled to go live at the International Association of Police Chiefs’ conference in Philadelphia in October, he said.
Bratton is widely credited with co-creating Compstat.
ellow officers didn’t have a safe network to share information with each other.
BlueLine is currently being beta-tested among 100 officers within the Los Angeles Police and L.A. County Sheriff’s departments and the University of Southern California’s campus police.
While initial reports have compared BlueLine to Facebook, company officials say it will more closely resemble popular social media business-oriented sites like LinkedIn. BlueLine will also allow companies who sell products geared for law enforcement to market to the more than 17,000 agencies the network hopes to lure.
“Our focus is to have a walled community where you’re verified and authenticated, so you have a safe form of communication with law enforcement, analysts and administrators,” said David Riker, Bratton Technologies’ president.
That wall of security is extremely important, said longtime Los Angeles Police Capt. Sean Malinowski, who has a group of officers testing BlueLine.
“We’re already seeing a lot of potential with it,” Malinowski said. “This is not a traditional ‘social media site,’ even though you can share files, photos and stuff. It’s really specific to the subject matter and expertise that officers want to divulge with each other.”
Malinowski said BlueLine is long overdue.
“That’s the thing with innovations. You are always asking questions like, ‘Why didn’t we have this already?”’ Malinowski said.
However, Malinowski said most officers have some safety and privacy concerns using social media sites due to the dangers associated with their jobs.
“They try not to be as traceable because there are threats made against officers all of the time,” said Malinowski, who is also married to a police officer. “You try not to be paranoid about it, but it does cross your mind.”
BlueLine will require multiple verifications for members of law enforcement to join and enter the network, Weiss said. He added that the platform will be housed in a secure data center that is compliant by the U.S. Dept. of Defense and the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services.
Also, Weiss said BlueLine will not be a venue where law enforcement can share information about specific criminal cases with each other.
BlueLine, however, will join the ranks of other law enforcement resource/information-sharing sites, including PoliceOne. BlueLine’s emergence also comes as police departments – many shrinking in manpower due to budget cuts – have begun experimenting with social media, according to a report by the U.S. Department of Justice and the Police Executive Research Forum, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank for police chiefs.
The joint study released in May noted that in a recent survey of 800 law enforcement agencies, 88 percent reported using social media ranging from preventing crime, community policing to investigations and intelligence gathering, but only 49 percent had a social media policy.
“I think we’re just on the front-end of understanding how social media can help, especially during a crisis,” said Chuck Wexler, the Police Executive Research Forum’s executive director. “I don’t think we’ve fully recognized its full potential.”