Jump to content

Video Identification Parade Electronic Recording

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Video Identification Parade Electronic Recording (VIPER) is a digital system for conducting identity parades. Rather than recruit a group of volunteers who resemble a suspect, police officers can retrieve a selection of pre-recorded video recordings of people unrelated to the case under investigation. Police officers make up a virtual parade, using clips taken from this library, and witness is then shown these, along with recordings of the current suspect.[1] The system is used by many police forces across the UK.[1]

VIPER was developed by West Yorkshire Police. The system is operated by the Viper Bureau from a datacentre in Wakefield.[2] The initiative is funded by the Home Office;[1] the initial set up cost was £7.6m, and the Wakefield datacentre was officially inaugurated by Home Secretary David Blunkett in March 2003.[2] The system contains clips of over 50,000 different people, which can be downloaded to police laptops to allow identification to be conducted at a witness' home.[1] A conventional lineup would cost at least £800 and could take up to ten weeks to set up – a VIPER parade costs around £150 and can be constructed in a few minutes.[1] The system operates on a virtual private network operated by Cable and Wireless.[2]

When the system was introduced in Scotland, Solicitor General for Scotland Elish Angiolini said "Viper is an excellent example of modernisation improving the service delivered to victims and witnesses. Old-style identification parades could be distressing for victims and witnesses and difficult to arrange quickly."[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e "Police offer virtual ID parades". BBC News. 14 March 2003. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  2. ^ a b c Tony Hallett (17 March 2003). "Police suspects face Viper parade". Silicon.com. Ziff Davis.
  3. ^ "Police to use virtual ID parades". BBC News. 1 April 2004. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
[edit]