Dear All,<br><br>The Serial Killer case exposes that our criminal detectives are either disconnected from court case databases (if any exist) or are poorly equipped to deal with reality on the ground. Probably both.<br><br>
The Daily Nation yesterday revealed the Serial Killer had a pending Court Case.<br><br>The fact that he worked for G4S also leaves a lot to be desired - assuming he had to <u>annually</u> get a Certificate of Good Conduct from the CID.<br>
<br>There should be annual requirement for security guards to get Certificates of Good Conduct if it is not the case already.<br><br>Court case (basic) information should be at the fingertips of every cop
on duty not just the CID. Every cop on duty (whether stationary or mobile) should be able
to instantly access 'Occurence Book' (OB) details / data, recorded
at ANY police station in the country tied to a particular ID#, Biometrics or even Aliases. Police transport (vehicles) should
be equipped with information & communication technology. Cops on the move should also have all weather mobile devices to record (photo / video / audio) evidence. Court cases being thrown out due to evidence not being collected well ASAP should become an exception not expectation in Kenya.<br>
<br>As the KICTB / World Bank funds various ideas producing digital content helpful to governance let them keep some of these in mind.<br><br>If cops know their work will be aided using ICT or analyzed on social (web & mobile) media most will do a better job. Many will not leave crime scenes without taking fingerprints, photographs, audio recordings - even if they have to use mobile phones provided by the Government which can deal with a mobile company with offices in Kenya e.g. Nokia.<br>
<br>We may have lower standards
of governance (public integrity) than Westerners but Kenyans who demand one law to be passed and enforced for all should be able to do so without being bombed / terrorized. <a href="http://www.onelawforall.org.uk/about/">http://www.onelawforall.org.uk/about/</a><br>
<br>Technically this is not difficult to achieve but politics, bureaucracy & bribery provide another angle.<br>
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What are we doing about it?<br><br>