Weddings, inspiration boards, recipes, and now, mug shots. “People are doing this to sell shampoo, so my question is, 'How do I use it to arrest people?'”
The Pinterest page of criminal suspects in Pottstown, PA
Police Departments from San Francisco to Pottstown, Penn. have begun using the image-sharing platform Pinterest to track down criminals, using it as a sort of digital replacement for the Post Office wall.
Departments making forays into social media began dabbling in the service, whose largely female audience has made it best known, perhaps, for wedding planning, as one of a range of tools aimed primarily at public relations and at generalized community outreach. But the service's image-centric interface has turned it into a tool for solving serious crimes as well.
Cops' experimentation with Pinterest appears, like the service itself, to have grown up outside of the elite cities and high-profile departments like New York and Los Angeles. The Pinterest policing pioneers are lower-profile cities in the middle of the country, places like Kansas City, Mo.—whose police department appears to have been the first on Pinterest—and Pottstown, Penn (pop. 22,377), thirty miles outside Philadelphia.
A glance at Pottstown's page, hosted by a local newspaper, The Mercury shows the intense engagement, with comments ranging from "holyshit! I think this was my babysitter from when I was younger" to very specific addresses and times and dates of their last sightings.
Pottstown Police Captain F. Richard Drumheller told NPR that the Pinterest page led to a 57 percent increase in arrests.
And larger departments have taken note. Philadelphia Police Department Corporal Frank Domizio said his agency—which has been among the leaders in using Facebook and other social platforms to seek crime reports—had moved to Pinterest after hearing of Pottstown's success.
“It’s a marketing thing,” said Domizio, who runs the department's social media channels. "People are doing this to sell shampoo, so my question is, 'How do I use it to arrest people?'”
Kansas City, Missouri’s police department was the first to build a Pinterest page. Sarah Boyd, a spokesperson for the department, heard from her old college friend, who helps run social media at the Pentagon, that the army had a Pinterest page. “I figured, if the US Army is doing it, so can we,” explains Boyd. She couldn’t find any other police departments with a page, but knowing Pinterest's growing popularity, she started one up.
Pinterest isn't the KCPD's first foray into leveraging social media: It's been using Facebook as a fan page since October 2010 and Twitter as a breaking news feed since 2009. Pinterest, says Boyd, is an “amalgam of everything—a repository of all different kinds of photographs.”
“The success is not just in solving specific crimes,” says Boyd. “It makes them trust us more, which makes them more likely to cooperate we us.” In other words, it’s classic community outreach.
Their page, which currently has 684 followers, has a number of boards:
"Identifying Street Drugs & Paraphernalia"
As Boyd explains, “We want moms to be able to know if they see it in their kids rooms, what it is.” (Warning: Kids are getting drunk on hand sanitizer!)
“Cool Police Equipment”
(Bomb arson robot!)
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