Whether it’s a police report, a warrant or a summary of a police interrogation, in St. Charles, there’s a good chance a police officer didn’t write it.
That’s because the department is now using Artificial Intelligence, or AI, to write routine but time-consuming police and court documents.
Chief Ray Juengst said it’s giving officers more time on patrol - a critical need, especially as police departments struggle with recruiting to keep their rosters full.
“If you look back through the history of law enforcement, originally we wrote reports, then we called them in to some type of secretary or someone at the desk typing them out, then we started using computers,” Juengst said. “This is just the next step in it.”
So, how does it work, and what could go wrong?
Officers enter information about a case into the computer program, toggle the AI tool, and it will generate a document by relying on the new information along with information previously entered into the system.
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Негізгі бет How St. Louis area departments are using AI in policing
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