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  1. "World of DaaS"
  2. Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved
Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS" · Nov 4, 2025

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley discusses modernizing law enforcement's outdated data systems and leveraging tech to deter crime.

60% of US Murders Go Unsolved, With a National Clearance Rate of Just 40%

Contrary to popular belief, law enforcement in the U.S. fails to solve the majority of homicides. The national average clearance rate is only 40%. The situation is even worse for non-violent crimes like car theft, where offenders have an 85% chance of getting away with it entirely.

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved thumbnail

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS"·5 months ago

Law Enforcement Tech Is Decades Behind, With Major Cities Only Recently Ditching Paper Files

The data infrastructure for law enforcement is fragmented and archaic. Until recently, some major US cities ran on paper, and states even outlawed cloud storage. This creates massive data silos that hinder investigations, as criminal activity crosses jurisdictions that don't share data.

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved thumbnail

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS"·5 months ago

Crime Syndicates Acquire Legitimate Freight Companies to Execute Untraceable Supply Chain Heists

A novel form of organized crime involves gangs buying small, established freight forwarding businesses. They leverage the company's legitimate reputation to take possession of high-value shipping containers, steal the goods, and then promptly shut down the business and disappear, making the crime nearly untraceable.

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved thumbnail

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS"·5 months ago

GovTech Startup Flock Safety Sells to Police in Under 90 Days by Framing Crime-Solving as "Revenue"

GovTech sales cycles are notoriously long. Flock overcame this by appealing directly to a police chief's primary performance metric: solving crime. A tool that saves time is a "cost-saver" delegated elsewhere. A tool that directly solves crime is a "revenue-generator" that the chief buys immediately.

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved thumbnail

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS"·5 months ago

Police Data Sharing "Tech" Evolves from Emailing PDFs to Unsanctioned Slack Groups

With no default data-sharing protocols, police agencies resort to primitive methods. The first step up from nothing is emailing PDF bulletins. More advanced groups create private Slack or WhatsApp channels for real-time collaboration, despite the data retention and security risks of using consumer tech.

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved thumbnail

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS"·5 months ago

The FBI's National Crime Database Updates Just Once Daily, Causing Dangerous Data Errors

The NCIC, a key FBI database for warrants and stolen vehicles, is more like a daily CSV file than a real-time system. This lag, combined with a lack of data integrity protocols, means outdated information, like a recovered rental car still listed as stolen, persists and puts civilians at risk.

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved thumbnail

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS"·5 months ago

Criminal Gangs Use Illegal Drones for Burglary Surveillance; Police Are Barred from Countering Them

Sophisticated gangs are using drones with their ADS-B trackers removed to scout wealthy homes without detection. Meanwhile, federal regulations prevent local law enforcement from deploying counter-drone technology, creating a situation where criminals have superior aerial capabilities and police have their hands tied.

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved thumbnail

Flock Safety CEO Garrett Langley - Law Enforcement's Data Problem: Why 60% of Murders Go Unsolved

"World of DaaS"·5 months ago