Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Forensic investigators at the scene of a murder
Forensic investigators at the scene of a murder - Credit: Photo: Politie
Crime
Innovation
police
cold case
artificial intelligence
forensic evidence
trace evidence
Roel Wolfert
Carina van Leeuwen
Wednesday, 23 May 2018 - 09:46

Share this article:

Artificial intelligence to help Dutch police solve cold cases: report

The Dutch police are using new artificial intelligence software to breathe new life into cold cases. The new software is specifically used to help hunt down still at large murderers and sex offenders, the Telegraaf reports.

The artificial intelligence will look at cold cases and identify which of them contain promising clues and trace evidence, so that they can be picked up again and reassessed with new forensic techniques. "At the current rate, we would be working for decades to map out the traces in all cold cases", Roel Wolfert of the Oost-Nederland police's Q-team said to the newspaper. The Q-team therefore teamed up with an external ICT partner to find a way to speed things up. "We built a system that has been taught to read digitized files and to automatically map out the forensic traces."

The Dutch police force is the first one in the world to start using this technology. "We are proud of this innovative way of detecting", Wolfert said to the newspaper. "We are on the verge of a new technological development."

Cold case teams across the Netherlands are delighted by this new technology. "This saves us an unspeakable amount of work", forensic detective Carina van Leeuwen said to the Telegraaf. "There are at least fifteen hundred cold case investigations in the Netherlands. Examining all of them manually is not feasible. Promising files remain on the shelf and that is unacceptable. For us, but certainly also for the surviving relatives."

According to Van Leeuwen, many old files contain information about forensic trace evidence that can lead directly to a perpetrator with today's technology. The artificial intelligence software will help them find these promising cases quickly. "The search system is no substitute for detectives", she said. "A murder investigation always remains human work. But with this help we can avoid a lot of ineffective work and immediately start looking for offenders. In this way, an analysis only takes one day instead of weeks."

More like this

Image
Handcuffs
Cold case team arrests Heerlen man for raping young woman in Nijmegen in 1994
Image
Police officer cordoning off a crime scene
British man stabbed to death in Heerhugowaard was wanted for Amsterdam double murder
Image
Carola Schouten
Rotterdam mayor uses King’s Night to call attention to women’s safety
Image
Eva Maria Pommer from Germany. Found dead in the dunes near Wassenaar on 4 July 2004 and identified in October 2025 throught he Identify Me Campaign
Deceased woman in Wassenaar identified after 21 years thanks to Identify Me campaign
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Meerstad girl shared footage of murdered parents with schoolmates; Town in shock
  • Katwijk municipal council gives provisional green light for Eli Lilly pharma factory
  • Dutch suicide rate lowest level since 2010; More young women, girls taking their lives
  • Storm warning joins heat warning: Temps up to 35°C, with hail, gusts, & downpours
  • No NS trains for 4 hours on Wednesday as workers strike against social benefits cuts

Top stories

  • Storm warning joins heat warning: Temps up to 35°C, with hail, gusts, & downpours
  • No NS trains for 4 hours on Wednesday as workers strike against social benefits cuts
  • Dutch police failed to investigate over 10,000 serious crimes in 2024: Court of Audit
  • Pinkpop expects extreme heat at festival; Race events adjust plans amid marathon deaths
  • Teen daughter reportedly in custody after married couple found killed in Groningen home

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content