FB pixel

Police take biometrics processing drunk drivers

 

Central District Police in Wellington, New Zealand recently began collecting the biometric data of individuals caught driving under the influence, according to a report by Wellington Scoop.

The new system enables police officers to confirm the identities of alleged offenders by digitally capturing the fingerprints and photographs of individuals they intend to charge with an offence.

The technology compares the biometric data against a database of existing police records then stores the new information for future reference.

Central District Police ensures that it will only use the technology on those drivers who blow over the drink-drive limit – which starting December 1st, will be lowered from 400mcg of alcohol per litre of breath to 250mcg — in a roadside breath test or commit an alleged offence for which they can be summoned.

Additionally, police will only collect biometric information from people they intend to charge with an offence.

In June, police ran a successful trial of the system in the Wellington “booze bus”. By the end of this month, all 21 Wellington “booze buses” will be equipped with the technology.

“This new technology has improved the way we use existing legislation and it will help Police protect communities by getting the most high-risk drivers off the roads faster,” said Inspector Dave White, Central District road policing manager. “Identifying high-risk drivers and recidivist drink-drivers at the roadside means alleged offenders can be charged appropriately from the outset and less time is spent making follow-up investigations to confirm a driver’s identify if false details are provided.”

Article Topics

 |   |   |   | 

Latest Biometrics News

 

Report demystifies India’s unique face biometrics market beyond the benchmarks

Biometric authentication is taking off in India as the country’s government and market align around identity as a trust layer…

 

Trust inevitable in building human rights-sensitive digital ID systems

Some digital rights advocates who spoke at the recent ID4Africa 2026 AGM in Abidjan emphasized that for African governments to…

 

Nepalese raise concerns over new DPI loans amid previous project failures

Some experts have expressed apprehensions that the government of Nepal has contracted a new loan for the implementation of a…

 

GripID introduces ultra-compact multimodal biometric enrollment kit

France-based GripID has unveiled the compact V10 multimodal biometric enrollment kit for registration to national ID and civil digital identity…

 

Australia opens feedback on verifiable credential policy, trust framework proposals

Australia’s Department of Finance is inviting community feedback on a policy for using verifiable credentials proposed by the Commonwealth. The…

 

FBI warning on Kali365 phishing kit exposes limits of weaker authentication

A new Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) warning about a phishing-as-a-service kit targeting Microsoft 365 accounts is underscoring why major…

Comments

9 Replies to “Police take biometrics processing drunk drivers”

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Biometric Market Analysis and Buyer's Guides

Most Viewed This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events