- The Complete Research Material is averagely 95 pages long and it is in Ms Word Format, it has 1-5 Chapters.
- Major Attributes are Abstract, All Chapters, Figures, Appendix, References.
- Study Level: BTech, BSc, BEng, BA, HND, ND or NCE.
- Full Access Fee: ₦6,000
Get the complete project »
Caritas logo
Title page
Certification page
Dedication page
Acknowledgement
Abstract
Table of content
List of tables
List of figures
List of appendixes
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background of the project
1.2 statement of problem
1.3 purpose of the project
1.4 Justification
1.5 scope of the project
1.6 limitation of the project
1.7 project report organization
1.8 Definition of terms
CHAPTER TWO
2.0 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Brief history of Nigeria police
2.2 Review of natural law theory
2.3 Review of crime history
2.4 Tracking system
2.5 Reasons for the failure of some criminal tracking system
CHAPTER THREE
3.0 SYSTEM ANALYSIS AND DESIGN
3.1 Methodology
3.2 Data collection
3.2.1 Methods of Data Collection
3.2.2 Input analysis
3.2.3 Witness / Suspect Statement Input System
3.2.4 Case File Input System
3.2.5 Crime Diary Input System
3.2.6 Output Analysis
3.2.7 Crime Register Output System
3.2.8 Output System Form CR. 2
3.2.9 System Output Form CR.8
3.2.10 System Output Form CR 14
3.2.11 Charge Sheet
3.2.12 Files and Records
3.3 Analysis of the Existing System
3.4 Limitations of the Existing System
3.4.1Justification for the new system
3.5 System Design
3.5.1 Output Specification and Design
3.5.2 Input Design and Specification
3.6 Database Design
3.7 Program Design and Specification
3.7.1 Criminal Registration
3.7.2 Suspect Registration
3.7.3 Report
3.7.4 Change Password
3.7. Complainant Registration
3.8 System Flowcharts
3.9 Top down design
CHAPTER FOUR
4.0 IMPLEMENTATION, TESTING AND INTEGRATION
4.1 Choice of Development Tools
4.2 System Requirement
4.2.1 Software Requirements
4.2.2 Hardware Requirements
4.2.3 People Ware (Personal Requirements)
4.3 system Implementation
4.4 Program Flowchart
4.5 Testing
4.5.1Unit testing
4.5.2 System testing
CHAPTER FIVE
5.0 SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
5.1 Summary of findings
5.2 limitations of the study/project
5.3 Recommendation
5.4 BEME (Bill of engineering measurement and evaluation)
5.5 Conclusion
Bibliography
Glossary
References
Glossary
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Man by nature is social, gregarious and cannot live in
isolation. To maintain peace and harmony in the society, man has to
fashion out conduct and some laws to govern the conduct of members of
the society. When people appreciate these codes of conduct and laws,
protection of lives and properties are guaranteed.
Generally tracking is the observing of persons or objects on the
move and supplying a timely ordered sequence of respective location
data to a model e.g. capable to serve for depicting the motion on a
display capability.
The traditional and age-old system of intelligence and criminal record maintenance has failed to live up to the requirements of the existing crime scenario. Manual processes neither provide accurate, reliable and comprehensive data round the clock nor does it help in trend prediction and decision support. It also results in lower productivity and ineffective utilization of manpower. The solution to this ever-increasing problem lies in the effective use of Information Technology. Crime Tracking Information System uses computer-generated records as an interface for integrating and accessing massive amounts of location-based information.
Crime tracking system allows police personnel to plan
effectively for emergency response, determine mitigation priorities,
analyses historical events, and predict future events. Crime tracking
system helps identify potential suspects to increase investigators
suspect base when no leads are evident. The ability to access and
process information quickly while displaying it in a spatial and visual
medium allows agencies to allocate resources quickly and more
effectively. In the ‗mission-critical‘ nature of law enforcement,
information about the location of a crime, incident, suspect, or victim
is often crucial to determine the manner and size of the response. Crime
tracking software helps co-ordinate vast amounts of location-based data
from multiple sources. It enables the user to layer the data and view
the data most critical to the particular issue or mission.
It is used world over by police departments, both large and
small, to provide solutions for crime analysis, criminal tracking,
traffic safety, community policing, Intranet/Internet mapping, and
numerous other tasks.
Crime tracking system helps crime officers determine potential crime sites by examining complex seemingly unrelated criteria and displaying them all in an interface. It also helps them map inmate populations, fixtures, and equipment to provide for the safety of inmates by separating gang members, identifying high-risk or potentially violent inmates, and identifying hazardous locations in an area. It reduces the potential for internal violence by providing better command and control. Traditionally, these activities have been supported by paper and pen. Police officers now have the ability to immediately generate crime report directly relevant to the situation at hand. Police agencies collect vast amounts of data from many sources including called-for-services, arrests, first information reports and daily report. The same information provides a powerful decision making tool for investigators, supervisors, and administrators.
1.2 STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
The Nigerian Police, which is used as a case study, has an
existing criminal Tracking System, but this system is not automated. The
documentation of criminal records is done on paper and pen. The storage
of these criminal records is not something to write home about.
Case files are dumped in heaps while some are kept on shelves. With the moldy nature of the state such important documents quickly get dusty and because of lack of proper storage, some criminal documents are seriously damaged by rats that feed on them. With this kind of situation, it becomes highly difficult if not impossible to track down known criminal, access past criminal history of a suspect and know the status of some concluded cases.
1.3 PURPOSE OF THE PROJECT
The project intends to computerize the existing Criminal
Tracking System at the Nigerian Police. Specifically, the project will
accomplish the following:
1) Design and develop a central database system that would serve
as statewide repository of criminal data. The smaller database system
at the sub-police station will be networked to the central database to
access criminal data on cases not handled at the local station. This
database system will be updated by local police station within the state
as well as the police headquarters. (acting as a criminal data
collection centers)
2) The central database system will be resident on a server at
the police headquarter and will be linked to both the local police
station and the Central Criminal Registry via a client- server between
station as well as Criminal Justice, the rendering of Criminal Justice.
3) The database system will capture detailed information about
crime suspect right from the time the crime was reported at the police
down to the point the suspect appears before the court for prosecution
as thereafter.
4) The systems will posses features that will enable criminal data to
5) be purged from the system, updated and queried.
1.4 JUSTIFICATION
Implementation of a crime information system by the Nigerian
police will help the police and the masses to get useful information on
individuals with crime records. The system developed will among other
things:
1. Maintain a database of all crime records
2. Enable a quick search on the database to retrieve crime information
3. Enable Nigerian police to track previous crimes committed by a suspect
4. Make crime control easier for the police
1.5 SCOPE OF THE PROJECT
Basically any Criminal Tracking System as an integral part of
the Criminal Justice Information System consists of three major
sections, that is:
a) The Criminal Identification Division
b) The Magistrate Segment, and
c) The prisons.
However, because of lack of time, funding and the scope of the
system, the project was limited to the development and implementation of
software –base criminal tracking information system that will automate
the processes involved in tracking down criminals by the Nigerian
Police.
1.6 LIMITATION OF THE PROJECT
Due to time and financial constraint, I was unable to visit few
of the police stations in Nigeria to gather information on the existing
crime information system. Few police stations were visited and the
information gathered from the officers in charge forms the basis for the
design of the new system.
The project did not cover the Prison and the Magistrate Segment, which could also be automated.
1.7 PROJECT REPORT ORGANIZATION
The project is organized as follows;-
Chapter one introduces the project; the background of the
project is also discussed. The objectives of the project, its
significance, scope, and constraints are pointed out.
A brief history of the Nigerian police and review of literature
on Criminal Tracking System are subject matter of Chapter two.
Chapter three discusses system Analysis and design. It deals
with detailed investigation and analysis of the existing system and
problem identification.
Chapter four covers the system implementation, testing and integration
Chapter five was the summary of findings, limitations of the
project, recommendations, bill of engineering measurement and evaluation
conclusion, bibliography, appendix A and Appendix B of the project.
1.8 DEFINITION OF TERMS
Crime: A normative definition views crime as deviant behavior
that violates prevailing norms – cultural standards prescribing how
humans ought to behave normally
Criminalization: One can view criminalization as a procedure
deployed by society as a pre-emptive, harm-reduction device, using the
threat of punishment as a deterrent to anyone proposing to engage in the
behavior causing harm.
FIIB: Federal Investigation and Intelligence Bureau
IGP: Inspector General of Police
DIG: Deputy Inspector General
FCID: Force Criminal Investigation Department (FCID) is the highest investigation arm of the Nigeria Police NPF.
You either get what you want or your money back. T&C Apply
You can find more project topics easily, just search
-
SIMILAR COMPUTER SCIENCE FINAL YEAR PROJECT RESEARCH TOPICS
-
1. DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF COMPUTERISED TOURISM INFORMATION SYSTEM (CASE STUDY OF OWERRI IN IMO STATE) NOTE: YOU CAN CHANGE THE CASE STUDY
» CHAPTER ONE1.0 INTRODUCTION Tourism is one of the fastest growing industries in the world today. It plays an important part in nation’s economy by p...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 91 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
2. COMPUTERIZED LAW COURT INFORMATION SYSTEM
» CHAPTER ONEINTRODUCTIONIntroductionThis chapter presents the introduction of court proceedings management system. It contains the theoretical backgrou...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 65 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
3. Design And Implementation Of A Computerized Career Guidance Information System
» DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF A COMPUTERIZED CAREER GUIDANCE INFORMATION SYSTEMABSTRACTComputers are known for their wide range of uses especially in s...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 50 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
4. DESIGN OF AUTOMATED REMOTE POWER MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (ARPMS)
» ABSTRACT The magnitude of operational losses in the supply of electricity in Nigeria has been growing significantly. Issues of theft and illegal conne...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 128 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
5. Design And Implement of a Result Processing and Student Registration system
» CHAPTER ONE 1.1 INTRODUCTION There were three fundamentally distinct education systems in Nigeria in 1990: the indigenous system, Quranic schools, and...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 107 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
6. DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF EXAMINATION SCHEDULING AND ALLOCATION SYSTEM
» ABSTRACT This research work was embarked on due to the issues being faced in academic setting on scheduling exams for the students so as not to have a...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 50 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
7. DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF AN NYSC POSTING SYSTEM 3
» CHAPTER ONE INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) is a scheme organized to have fresh Nigeria graduates passed through a o...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 55 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
8. DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF AN ANDROID-BASED ONLINE CLEARANCE SYSTEM FOR GRADUATING STUDENTS
» ABSTRACT An Android based online clearance system is a research work that will help build an effective information management for schools. It is aimed...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 63 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
9. DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF WEB BASED STUDENT MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM
» CHAPTER ONE: GENERAL INTRODUCTION This chapter discusses the introductory part of the thesis which includes background of the study, research motivati...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 50 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
-
10. Design Of A National Identity Card System (a Case Study Of National Identity Card, Ngwo Local Government Area Enugu State
» ABSTRACTThis project is aimed at improving along lasting processing and administration system on National Identity card. It is also aimed at keeping r...Continue Reading »Item Type & Format: Project Material - Ms Word | 52 pages | Instant Download | Chapter 1-5 | COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT