So Much for Collaboration ...
BY Nick Judd | Wednesday, May 25 2011
What crime data are open and which aren't? In Torrance, Ca., an online crime map omits rapes, shoplifting, or officer-involved shootings, the LA Times reports:
Launched last year, the city's map promised to use cutting-edge technology to notify residents of the latest crimes in their community. But a Times review has found that the Torrance Police Department deliberately withholds information on hundreds of crimes across the city, including some of the most serious.
More than 150 theft reports filed at the Del Amo mall in the months after the map launched are missing. So are eight rapes recorded by Torrance police and scores of other crimes that the department deems "confidential."
The Times is seeking to pull automated feeds of crime data from all the police departments in its coverage area, their Ben Welsh writes. Torrance is withholding data where the Los Angeles Police Department and the local sheriff's department do not, Welsh reports.
Much has been made in recent years of the promise that lies in finding ways for governments and media outlets to collaborate where they have common goals — like informing the public. It seems pretty clear that not being up-front about what's getting held back when it comes to providing data — or any public records, for that matter — is not a good way to start.