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NYC Emergency Hot Lines Accepting Photos, Videos

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NYC Emergency Hot Lines Accepting Photos, Videos

New Technology Allows For Advanced Reporting Of Crimes And Complaints Over Quality Of Life Issues

NEW YORK (CBS) ― A picture is truly worth a thousand words, as far as New York City's new 9-1-1 calls are concerned.

On Tuesday, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that photos and video can now be transmitted to the hotline. Operators will notify the NYPD when callers have cell phone images of accidents or crimes.

"Before I became mayor, I built a business on the idea that we could improve companies' performance by delivering better information faster, and we've tried to bring that same philosophy to government," Bloomberg said.

Bloomberg also emphasized that the most important thing to do in an emergency is not to take pictures, but to call for help.

Callers with a cell phone video or photo of a crime also can notify the emergency operator, and a detective with the New York Police Department's Real Time Crime Center will call back to receive the images.

By next year, photos sent by bystanders will be made available to patrol cars in the area. "This technology should put a scare into every would-be criminal, because the chances of getting caught in the act is now better than ever," said Bloomberg.

Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said major improvements to technology within the department in the past six years have helped reduced crime, which is down more than 3 percent so far this year from last year. More than 12,000 new computers have been installed in precincts around the city, technology in radio cars has been improved and the department is better able to share information.

"When I returned to the department in 2002, I saw that very little had changed as far as technology. We were still one of the world's leading users of carbon paper and Wite-Out. But that's changed significantly," he said.

While hundreds of cities around the country accept text messages to emergency hot lines, New York is believed to be the first city with the capability to accept images, which may be used as evidence when prosecuting criminals, officials said.

City officials said it's also possible to deliver images anonymously with a few extra steps. Kelly has said he would welcome all images, including videos like the one widely circulated online in July that showed a police officer body-checking a cyclist taking part in a protest ride.

The city's non-emergency hot line, 311, is also now equipped to accept video and photos of everything from graffiti to potholes. New Yorkers can submit those images through the city's Web site or call the hot line. Bloomberg said it will help residents to better describe some of their quality-of-life woes.

It took about 18 months to develop the image software and cost about $250,000, city officials said. The NYPD gets about 11 million 911 calls annually, and 311 gets about 15 million.

(© 2010 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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