Justice & Public Safety
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In the two years since the state released guidance for localities interested in speed or red-light cameras, fewer than 10 percent of its municipalities have submitted and won approval of plans.
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Responder MAX will focus on marketing, communications, recruitment and other areas. First Arriving, which has worked with some 1,300 agencies, will keep involved with its "real-time information platform."
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San Jose is the latest city whose use of the cameras to snag criminal suspects, critics say, also threatens privacy and potentially runs afoul of laws barring access by out-of-state and federal agencies.
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American Civil Liberties Union continues to object to city’s crime camera program.
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Inglewood, Calif.’s CIO shares his experiences in taking a homegrown computer-aided dispatch system off an aging IBM mainframe.
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Law enforcement will use video surveillance equipment attached to a small plane.
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An electronic database of protective and restraining orders gives judges and law enforcement another tool to keep Californians safer.
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First-ever test will transmit a federal message through designated broadcast systems on Nov. 9.
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The 11th annual survey spotlights the municipalities that best show how information and communication technology are used to enhance public service.
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Study finds some red-light camera system contracts limit government’s ability to enforce traffic regulations.
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New software helps Orlando police speed up crash report availability.
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System used by 4,500 law enforcement agencies has been around since the 1990s.
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Port Washington public school district tests cameras with eyelids for privacy and security.
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The device can detect what’s going on behind 8-inch concrete.
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Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV, D-W.Va., asked the Federal Trade Commission for a report on the security impacts of facial recognition technology.
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E-ticketing system pilot will reduce paper costs and process traffic tickets faster, officials say.
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The Department of Homeland Security believes the hacker group wants to target the networked infrastructure of private industry.
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Law enforcement agencies in Oklahoma use event to troubleshoot and improve robots used by bomb squads.
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Identifications, license plates, even airplane N-numbers can all be checked almost instantly.
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911 operators more easily identify calling patterns with assistance from automated data collection.
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The Charlotte, N.C., City Council has approved a contract to deploy a 4G long term evolution (LTE) network in the 700 MHz spectrum for public safety communication.
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