The web browser is fast becoming the common software application that allows agencies with similar and disparate systems to interact with each other. New Dawn's JusticeWebview empowers JustWare and JusticeBroker users with the ability to access and share agency-defined information.Live Web demo Brochure ScreenshotsVideos, testimonials & case studies
If you allow other criminal justice community agencies secure access to your criminal justice information, you can begin to soften the political barriers that often stall many data sharing projects. Let JusticeWebview be the first step in encouraging participants to electronically share and file information.
Security is vital in any implementation of criminal justice access via the web. Each query that you define in JusticeWebview can be given unique access permissions. For example, only law enforcement staff, or even certain law enforcement staff members, will have permission to view pertinent case information. Other queries can be made accessible to outside agencies or the public, according to the security logins that you define. Only JusticeWebview administrators will have permission to define the web queries, users, agencies and passwords.
Every JusticeWebview web query is defined by you. You define the format, look, function, and secure location.
By implementing JusticeWebview, your reports arrive directly in your inbox—on demand or on a schedule. Your judges, administrators, or even external stakeholders—such as law enforcement officials or criminal justice staff—will all love the regular, convenient access to reports and updates.
Each JusticeWebview query can be exported to a PDF file and printed. Users can print criminal histories, calendars, dockets, event information and more!
JusticeWebview is an ideal solution for office, personal, court, attorney, judge and law enforcement calendars. You can easily define the formats, date filters, event locations and more. You can view calendar and event information from anywhere with an Internet connection!
JusticeWebview uses the latest in XHTML technology, ensuring that you can properly run, display and print JusticeWebview information from Internet Explorer and FireFox.
Provide access into your case management system to your participating law enforcement offices by giving them access to important case information via their web browsers. Law enforcement calendars for subpoenaed events can be defined by your criminal justice community and accessed via the Internet.
Law enforcement officers are able to search and see a list of recent cases and dispositions. You can search by law enforcement case number, victim, witness or defendant name…it is up to you!
Law enforcement access via JusticeWebview is often the first step in breaking down the political barriers that stall justice sharing and integration projects.
JusticeWebview offers a great way for attorneys, judges and probation staff to access case status, event and active case information and view office and personal calendars from any secure web location.
Jail staff can easily query JusticeWebview to get a printable event list for incarcerated offenders for trial preparation.
JusticeWebview’s capability and tight security gives web access to public case, docket and name information. It provides relevant data to the press, victims and other pertinent case stakeholders.
JusticeWebview users can easily launch web queries directly from JustWare or bookmark them in their web browsers for future access.
Many judicial, probation and parole, prosecution and public defender offices have existing procedural policies in place that limit certain internal office members to view-only access of case information. JusticeWebview is the perfect solution for these staff members. You define the information accessible, the display, layout and more! Training is a snap with this web-browser interface!
The flexibility of JustWare and the power of JusticeWebview provide a web-based, agency-defined solution for public access to sex offender records. You define the queries that present limited data to the public, such as registered address, alias, mug-shots, age, physical description, vehicle information, offenses and other critical offender information.