FBI Celebrates 10-Year Partnership with Digital Billboards

Nov. 29, 2017
57 Cases Resolved Because of Digital Billboard Publicity

November 20, 2017 (Washington, DC) –A brainstorming idea 10 years ago from an FBI Citizens Academy – to put fugitives’ faces on digital billboards -- has solved dozens of tough crime cases.

“We are always looking for creative ways to enable folks, creative ways to solve the crime, and the digital billboards are a perfect example of that,” said FBI Assistant Director Stephen E. Richardson (Criminal Investigative Division).
In 2007, a graduate of the FBI Citizens Academy in Philadelphia who worked for a billboard company volunteered to display fugitives’ pictures on digital billboards, a new product at that time.

The idea worked in Philadelphia, and quickly expanded into a national partnership between the FBI and the billboard industry, which donates space.  The FBI has resolved 57 cases based directly on information prompted by digital billboard publicity.

On November 7, AD Richardson spoke to the board of directors of the billboard trade group, the Outdoor Advertising Association of America. He thanked the industry for helping law enforcement, and encouraged its leaders to participate in FBI Citizens Academies.

Law enforcement has long sought the public’s help via media. In 1950, the FBI launched its “Ten Most Wanted Fugitives” program, with mugshots in newspapers. Thomas James Holden – Number One on the FBI’s initial list – was apprehended in Oregon after he was recognized by someone who had seen his picture in a newspaper.

With increased use of digital technology, the FBI has turned to unique media partnerships, such as digital billboards, to publicize fugitives and empower the public to help law enforcement.

"In times of crisis, in times of national emergency, if we’re looking for bad guys or bad gals, we use the billboards’ system in order to get the message out to the public," added Richardson.

FBI Citizens Academies

Citizens Academy programs (six-to-eight-weeks) give business, religious, civic, and community leaders an inside look at the FBI. Classes meet in the evening at FBI field offices around the country. The mission of FBI Citizens Academies is to foster a greater understanding of the role of federal law enforcement in the community through frank discussion and education. Learn more at www.fbi.gov/about/community-outreach.

Digital Billboards

Nationwide, there are 7,300 digital billboards, according to a recent OAAA survey.  Rotating static messages appear for six-to-10 seconds.  Billboard companies donate space to the FBI and other law enforcement agencies.

Examples

The FBI activated digital billboards in Las Vegas after the October 1 mass shooting, seeking information from the public about the shooter and the crime, prompting more than 4,000 tips.

Authorities credited digital billboards with helping find the East Coast Rapist in 2011, after a long, multi-state manhunt.

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