Bolivian Law Enforcement to Get Computer Tech Boost From State Dept.

A computer system that the government of Bolivia uses to conduct and track criminal investigations is slated to undergo technological modernization, courtesy of the U.S. State Dept. According to a presolicitation notice dated May 22, a unspecified State international narcotics & law enforcement program intends to award a sole-source contract to Neotec, Inc., to integrate automated fingerprint-identification technology into the existing Bolivian system.

The project's goal is to enable Bolivian law enforcement personnel "to establish the identity of a person based on fingerprints, especially in cases where a suspect is arrested more than once with different names and in different locales," the document says. National and regional officials could benefit from the proposed system via the heightened ability to connect disparate criminal records -- and suspects -- and to notify relevant, local law-enforcement agencies when necessary, according to the document.

About Stephen Peacock

I'm currently a high school English teacher and writer. I'm also a former Washington, DC, journalist, having worked for Communications Daily and Washington Internet Daily (WID), investigative newsletters that cover the telecommunications, broadcast and Internet industries. Following the 9/11 attacks, my news beat expanded beyond Capitol Hill telecom/TV/IT policy and began to include technology-policy coverage at the Pentagon and Dept. of Homeland Security. I've written over a thousand articles about government and industry affairs, and I'm pleased to say that I was the reporter who broke the story about the Total Information Awareness surveillance/data-collection initiative of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. I've written articles for publications including NACLA Report on the Americas, Drug Enforcement Report, Corrections Journal, and The Tampa Tribune. I've also written a memoir about my former career as a plainclothes security officer of the Helmsley Palace hotel in New York City, Hotel Dick: Harlots, Starlets, Thieves & Sleaze.

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About Stephen Peacock

Personal Website
http://jerseysandstorm.blogspot.com/

Biography
I'm currently a high school English teacher and writer. I'm also a former Washington, DC, journalist, having worked for Communications Daily and Washington Internet Daily (WID), investigative newsletters that cover the telecommunications, broadcast and Internet industries. Following the 9/11 attacks, my news beat expanded beyond Capitol Hill telecom/TV/IT policy and began to include technology-policy coverage at the Pentagon and Dept. of Homeland Security. I've written over a thousand articles about government and industry affairs, and I'm pleased to say that I was the reporter who broke the story about the Total Information Awareness surveillance/data-collection initiative of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. I've written articles for publications including NACLA Report on the Americas, Drug Enforcement Report, Corrections Journal, and The Tampa Tribune. I've also written a memoir about my former career as a plainclothes security officer of the Helmsley Palace hotel in New York City, Hotel Dick: Harlots, Starlets, Thieves & Sleaze.