CrimTrac Shops for $30m Biometric ID Overhaul

CrimTrac shops for $30m biometric ID overhaul

Australia’s top crime and policing information agency, CrimTrac , has tapped the market for one of the biggest technology upgrades in its after releasing a tender next generation biometric identification system that recognises not only fingerprints and palm prints, but also footprints and facial images.

The new system will replace the aging National Automated Fingerprint Identification System (NAFIS) in 2017. The NAFIS provides police agencies around Australia with access to fingerprint data. It contains fingerprint and palm print information on 3.3 million people.

CrimTrac is seeking submissions for a “market-leading” system that gives law enforcement agencies fast and reliable technology so state and federal police can undertake facial recognition of images held in police databases, which includes approximately 12 million images nationally.

The role of facial recognition in police and security intelligence work has grown dramatically in recent years thanks to better resolutions and clarity of images captured from digital cameras that in turn allow investigators to sift through potential matches against file photos far more quickly.

The current NAFIS supplier is Morpho, which replaced Japanese vendor NEC in 2003. Morpho is a subsidiary of French multinational aerospace and security company Safran. The current contract with Morpho, which will expire in May 2017, is worth $30 million. Morpho also supplies the FBI and Interpol, and many national and local police forces.

“Modern day threats demand IT capability that can easily assist in greater and faster collection of evidence, which can then be accessed nationwide,” said a statement from the Minister for Justice Michael Keenan.

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