From identity theft to gang warfare, law enforcement agents and other investigators face the monumental task of collecting and correlating forensic evidence, witness reports and other paper documents ...
MCLEAN, Va., Dec. 22, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE:NOC) and i2, McLean, Va., have developed an interface between the U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service's (NCIS) ...
I2 Inc. has acquired Knowledge Computing Corp., a provider of analysis software to law enforcement agencies. Financial terms were not disclosed. The acquisition strengthens i2’s software capabilities ...
MCLEAN, Va., Jan. 18, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The North Central Texas Fusion Center (NCTFC) has awarded a contract to i2, the leading provider of intelligence and investigation software, to ...
IBM is enabling law enforcement agencies to access one of the world's largest networks of law enforcement data comprising more than a billion shareable documents from the cloud. IBM i2 COPLINK on ...
Dr. Kathleen Kiernan brings domain expertise to leading intelligence and investigation solution vendor i2, Inc., the global leader in intelligence and investigation solutions for law enforcement, ...
IBM enabled law enforcement agencies of any size to access one of the world's largest networks of law enforcement data comprising more than a billion shareable documents from the Cloud. IBM i2 COPLINK ...
Now, more than ever before, IBM i2 COPLINK supports law enforcement in the field. IBM® i2® COPLINK® is police software with database capabilities to consolidate data from many sources, aid ...
i2, a UK-based provider of intelligence and investigation management software, has agreed to acquire Tucson, Ariz.-based Knowledge Computing Corp. No financial terms were disclosed. i2 is a portfolio ...
IBM is enabling law enforcement agencies of any size to access one of the world's largest networks of law enforcement data comprising more than a billion shareable documents from the Cloud. IBM i2 ...
The idea of law enforcement networking goes back a long way, and today, it's hard to see a police car without some kind of network terminal in it enabled for remote access. But IBM is taking this idea ...