NCJ Number: |
150819  |
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Title: |
Drugfire: Revolutionizing Forensic Firearms Identification and Providing the Foundation for a National Firearms Identification Network |
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Journal: |
Crime Laboratory Digest Volume:21 Issue:4 Dated:(October 1994) Pages:63- 67 |
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Author(s): |
R W Sibert |
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Date Published: |
1994 |
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Page Count: |
5 |
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Sponsoring Agency: |
National Institute of Justice/ Rockville, MD 20849 NCJRS Photocopy Services Rockville, MD 20849-6000 |
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Sale Source: |
National Institute of Justice/ NCJRS paper reproduction Box 6000, Dept F Rockville, MD 20849 United States of America
NCJRS Photocopy Services Box 6000 Rockville, MD 20849-6000 United States of America |
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Document: |
PDF |
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Type: |
Survey |
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Format: |
Article |
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Language: |
English |
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Country: |
United States of America |
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Annotation: |
DRUGFIRE is an automated, database-driven, multimedia firearms evidence imaging system, developed by the FBI and initially installed in crime laboratories in the Baltimore- Washington, DC area in July 1992. |
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Abstract: |
This revolutionary new forensic tool has since been refined and improved through feedback provided by the firearm examiners using the system. DRUGFIRE is designed to increase the effectiveness of forensic firearms examiners in maintaining, sharing, and searching unsolved firearms case evidence files. The system has been used to link apparently unrelated shooting incidents and/or recovered firearms in scores of cases, proving that firearms are being retained by criminals and used in the commission of multiple crimes. The deployment of DRUGFIRE allows firearms examiners to centrally store, search, and share forensic firearms data and to conduct remote, side-by-side microscopic comparisons of ammunition components. The FBI plans to form a national computer network of firearms laboratories, clustered together by region, which will exchange information via DRUGFIRE with other clusters. 3 figures |
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Main Term(s): |
Computers |
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Index Term(s): |
Computer aided investigations; Crime laboratories; Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); Firearms identification; Police information systems; Video imaging |
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To cite this abstract, use the following link: http://www.ncjrs.gov/App/publications/abstract.aspx?ID=150819 |
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