If you've worked with me or attended my training seminars, you may know my
 mantra: Organization is key. 
When I work in a Property and Evidence Unit, there are a number of critical organizational techniques I always 
hope to see in place before I leave. Why? Because organization is key. 
It enables all of us on the job: we have the tools to be efficient, 
professional, and compliant.
One
 of my favorite “tools” is a shared computer drive. This is a 
replacement for your wall of post-it notes and memos taped to desktops 
as reminders. Unfortunately, those notes, intended to be helpful 
reminders, often become wallpaper and overlooked. On an evidence room 
visit in 2008, I found a memo from 1996 taped to the wall above the 
Property Officer’s desk. Wallpaper for sure. Time for a shared drive.
 
 A
 shared drive on the department computer system is designated for the 
Property and Evidence Unit only, and contains files for all current 
forms, protocols, and directives. There are many software programs 
available for organizing a shared drive, and if you have an in-house IT 
guru, establishing a sleekly designed reference program is ideal. 
However, your IT department should be able to provide exactly what you 
need, economically.
A
 shared drive on the department computer system is designated for the 
Property and Evidence Unit only, and contains files for all current 
forms, protocols, and directives. There are many software programs 
available for organizing a shared drive, and if you have an in-house IT 
guru, establishing a sleekly designed reference program is ideal. 
However, your IT department should be able to provide exactly what you 
need, economically. 
  
 
This
 organized filing system works well in large or small property and 
evidence units. For obvious reasons, your agency policy should dictate 
the “security levels” for all automation related to the property and 
evidence unit; therefore, a key element is the "Read Only" feature for 
“Authorized Users”. Your agency policy governs all aspects involving 
the Property and Evidence Unit, so be sure it addresses who is 
responsible for uploading information to the shared drive, what files are stored there, 
the access levels, the annual review for relevancy, etc.
 
 
Below are just a few suggestions you may wish to include on your shared (reference) drive:
 
- Monthly auction manifests and remittance checks for easy reference;
- "Archived or historical" records relating to the evidence room that would be otherwise placed in a binder;
- Flyers
 or brochures for training presentations that you have attended 
throughout the year (who knows when your supervisor will need a list of 
training you’ve attended for your annual review?);
- Telephone records, for the court house, city hall, department of justice, county jail; 
- Annual firearm and narcotic destruction lists and related court affidavits;
- Firearm handling reference materials;
- Finance transfers;
- Range master lists;
- Guidelines for media protocols, photo and taped interview upload instructions;
- Administrative policies, packaging manuals and procedures;
- “Law
 Enforcement Only” emails that are circulated that provide instructional
 materials or contact phone numbers -for instance: regional task force 
information on copper wire thefts, Officer Safety Bulletins, etc.;
- Logs
 or registers for all equipment used in the Property and Evidence Room 
relating to: room access, alarm testing, blood drying cabinet usage, 
calendared temperature checks on all freezers and refrigerators; 
- Forensic lab fee schedules;
- Equipment warranties.
 
 
 
Remember
 to make the shared drive "Read Only" so that the information is secure 
and can't modified or deleted (when you have multiple people accessing 
the information).
 
Depending
 on your unit’s current organization and resources, putting together a 
shared drive can be a large or small task. The degree of efficiency the 
shared drive produces is phenomenal, and it gives everyone involved in 
property handling the tools and confidence they’re doing their job well.
 Put together a shared drive and you’ll find time to address other needs
 in your unit. 
Remember: Organization is key.