Police Reforms – SC directives, NPC, other committees reports

Smart Policing

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: CCTN

Mains level: Paper 2- Use of technology in policing and issues with it

Context

On March 11, speaking at the NCRB Foundation Day, the Union Home Minister remarked that the second phase of the Inter-operable Criminal Justice System (ICJS) is set to be completed by 2026.

Increasing use of technology for policing

  • the Inter-operable Criminal Justice System (ICJS), a Rs 3,500 crore project, is set to be completed by 2026 with increased use of artificial intelligence, fingerprint systems and other tools of predictive policing.
  • One crore fingerprints had already been uploaded and if these were available to all police stations as part of the Crime and Criminal Tracking Network System (CCTNS), there would no longer be any need to pursue criminals.
  • The existing systems of ICJS and CCTNS empower the state to cross-reference data between different pillars of the criminal justice system.
  • Recently, the Indore Police Commissioner unveiled a “fingerprint-based criminal record data fetching system” in which a small thumb impression machine can be added to a phone.
  • If the fingerprint recorded matches with the police database, all information about a person’s criminal record will be pulled up.

Issues with the use of technologies

  • Privacy concerns: The enthusiasm for generating and cross-referencing data to make policing more efficient ignores privacy concerns and structural faults of policing.
  • The Supreme Court in K.S Puttaswamy declared a fundamental right to informational privacy as paramount and noted that any measure that sought to collect information or surveil must be legal, necessary, and proportionate.
  • Fear of mass surveillance: Integrating “fingerprint-based criminal record data fetching system” to the list of predictive policing practices will give birth to mass surveillance, particularly of certain oppressed caste communities, based on little evidence.
  • Nomadic and semi-nomadic tribes were ascribed “criminality by birth” and considered as “hereditary criminals addicted to systematic commission of non-bailable offences” under the colonial Criminal Tribes Act, 1871.
  • It has been replaced with the murky Habitual Offenders (HO) provisions, which have acted as a tool for police to continue to attribute criminality to Vimukta communities, by mandating their surveillance through regular check-ins at police stations.
  • Mere suspicion or FIRs filed against an individual are sufficient to trigger the discretionary powers of the police.

Consider the question “Use of technology in policing can make it better at the same time run the risk of making it more dangerous.” Critically examine.

Conclusion

With the increasing adoption of technology in policing, we must pay attention to the risks involved and the issue of misuse.

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