Language Translation
  Close Menu

Electronic Citation and Warning System (eCWS)

Project Overview

Approximately 1,000,000 traffic citations are issued in Indiana every year. Now that eCWS is in production, law enforcement agencies using the system can electronically print tickets at the time of a traffic stop. Other officers are still hand writing citations and the forms used vary from county to county.  eCWS lets officers electronically record citation information in the field, eliminating the need for redundant manual data entry, drastically reducing administrative work, and increasing the safety of Hoosier roadways by quickly identifying dangerous drivers and reducing the time needed for a traffic stop.

Court Technology, the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Indiana Criminal Justice Institute, Indiana State Police, Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Indiana State Excise Police and  local law enforcement agencies worked together to give law enforcement officers statewide the ability to produce tickets electronically at the time of a traffic stop. Data can be transmitted electronically to appropriate law enforcement, courts, and state and federal agencies.  eCWS also allows officers to electronically complete the Operating While Intoxicated PC Affidavit, General Probable Cause Affidavit, and a Tow Form, using scanned or imported data.

The eCWS system is currently being used by Indiana State Police officers statewide and officers in over 490 other law enforcement agencies. The application is available in a laptop computer version for patrol cars. A hand-held portable version for motorcycle officers, water or foot patrol is currently being used by ISP motorcycle troopers, Indiana Excise Police, Indiana Department of Natural Resources, and over 20 local law enforcement agencies in the field. eCWS and training is available to law enforcement at no cost.


How It Works

Officers use a scanner to read the drivers license and vehicle registration.  A new citation is then generated in the eCWS system with the driver’s information automatically entered. The officer records the appropriate offenses and court information and prints a paper ticket for the offender.

In cooperation with the U. S. Department of Transportation, eCWS produces a Uniform Traffic Ticket (UTT) that identifies Commercial Drivers.  The electronic information recorded by the officer will be transmitted to courts and the Bureau of Motor Vehicles in later phases of this project. All citation and warning information is uploaded to the eCWS Central Repository and made available to the appropriate judicial and law enforcement officials so the most up-to-date data is available. Because they will, in the future, have access to more timely data, an officer in one county may determine that a warning is not appropriate if the same driver was given a warning the week before in another county.

The eCWS initiative, in conjunction with the Odyssey initiative, allows courts and clerks to transmit serious infractions by a commercial driver to the BMV electronically instead of by mail or fax, increasing the flow and accuracy of conviction data.


Benefits of eCWS

Police officers work with a JTAC developer to test the eCWS system and provide feedback about the equipment, the online application and the tickets it produces.

  • Eliminates handwritten tickets  and the need to enter the same information into a separate database(s)
  • Enhances safety of Hoosier streets and highways by identifying dangerous drivers quickly
  • Eliminates duplicate entries by law enforcement, courts, clerks, ISP, and BMV
  • Increases accuracy of information—data fields pre-populated from license and registration
  • Reduces errors because data is not retyped multiple times
  • Gives officers more time to patrol by reducing paperwork
  • Saves clerical time for clerks, courts and agencies because data is transferred electronically
  • Improves timeliness by making data available electronically

More Information


Contact Information

For more information, contact Mike Wilson at mike.wilson@courts.in.gov, 317.234.6262, or the Court Technology Help Desk (toll free) at 888.275.5822.

 Top FAQs