Justice & Public Safety
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The Flathead County Sheriff's Office is set to receive a new remote underwater vehicle after getting approval from county commissioners on Tuesday.
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Thurston County, Wash., commissioners are currently considering regulating the county’s acquisition and use of artificial intelligence-enabled surveillance technology with a new draft ordinance.
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The Larimer County Sheriff’s Office on Monday arrested the man after he reportedly stole a vehicle from a business in east Fort Collins, set it on fire and damaged nearby agricultural land.
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Although the LAPD has not finalized its policy for the cameras, the department is moving forward with infrastructure work to prepare the divisions that will use them first.
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Lawmakers from the state are considering a bill that would enable law enforcement agencies to retain data obtained from license plate readers for up to 30 days.
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In the first in a series of data-driven projects, New Orleans looks at ways to make its operations smarter and keep its citizens safer.
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In Anoka County, Minn., fire departments and law enforcement agencies can now share critical data during a response.
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San Francisco uses the concept of sampling before finishing the final product.
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The City Council approved the program that will allow freight and emergency vehicles to communicate with the city's traffic signal system, helping them move more easily through traffic.
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Proposed standards would make the public back up when shooting video of officers working crime scenes or making arrests.
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So far, $6.5 million in federal money has been allocated for the project, which is estimated to cost $38.3 million to build for California, Oregon and Washington.
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Troubled by the hundreds of people killed annually in New York City traffic incidents, Mayor Bill de Blasio last year announced a plan to drastically reduce traffic fatalities citywide.
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Unlike the previous system, the new one does not provide the public with detailed descriptions of crimes or reports of rapes or incidents involving juveniles or families.
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Let’s hold cloud storage for law enforcement video to the highest security standards.
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If passed, the bill will be the first one to require police to delete information collected from those who are not the target of a specific police request.
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Lawmakers in more than a half-dozen states are trying to rein in the militarization of their police forces.
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New Mexico drivers who carry their proof of insurance only electronically may find they are cited at a traffic stop for lack of documentation.
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Officials quickly learned after testing began the cameras were not strong enough for the prisons’ security needs.
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Carmakers are in hot pursuit of fleet sales to law enforcement agencies.
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Some jailers are wary of the video visitation rates, in part because of a federal crackdown on costly calls charged to inmates via conventional phones and critics who say inmates are being exploited.
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The lawsuit claims the Department of Corrections broke the law because state officials convened as a legislative committee to help shape public policy, but they didn’t invite the public to any of their meetings.
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