Steven, I wanted to update you on our ALPR success story. We had an armed robbery Sunday night August 16, 2009 in the county. I had just ridden b ...Read More
The most advanced AUTOMATIC LICENSE
PLATE READERS (ALPR) available. Aiding Law Enforcement with public
safety solutions and vehicle-related crimes by reading 3,600 license
plates a minute, more accurately than any other ALPR system available.
The cameras read license plates of parked and moving cars - hundreds per minute - and check them against vehicle databases, said Lance Clem, a spokesman for the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, which purchased several systems for its police vehicles last fall.
The license plate readers are infrared cameras mounted onto police vehicles. They can scan thousands of license plates an hour and check the plates against national and local criminal databases, even while the police vehicle is moving.
The automated license plate readers, provided by ELSAG North America, will record the license plates of all vehicles the patrol car passes. The numbers will be cross-referenced with wanted or stolen cars. . .
In terms of data sharing, the same will apply for the Mobile Plate Hunter 900 Series cameras. The system includes two cameras mounted on a patrol car that automatically scan and process license plate numbers of vehicles parked or driving nearby.
Saint Paul Police Department has deployed a few pieces of futuristic high tech gadgetry to flag stolen vehicles. They are automatic license plate readers, which can snag tag numbers on moving vehicles using optical character recognition technology.
The MPH-900 is the hightlight of the Homeland Security Conference held in San Antonio on February 15, 2010. CBS news reports about the power of the digital license plate recognition system by ELSAG North America.
Mitchell said police were alerted to Pavone's location after the [MPH-900] license plate reader on the Broome County sheriff's patrol car scanned the plate on his truck.
ELSAG North America, market leader in Automatic License Plate Recognition (ALPR) technology with its Mobile Plate Hunter-900 (MPH-900®) is proud to announce their partnership with Jubilant Enpro Private Ltd. (JUBILANT ENPRO) in India. At the close of a successful year, ELSAG is excited to be teaming up with JUBILANT ENPRO and working with them to further develop the Indian market for their law enforcement technology.
Thanks to President Obama's Recovery Act, the police department received a $24,723 Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant to buy an automatic license plate reader from New York-based ELSAG North America. The department hopes to have it installed in a police cruiser by the first of the year.
i2 Strategic Partnership with ELSAG Increases Effectiveness of Existing Law Enforcement and National Security Investments With i2 and ELSAG North America's Integrated Solution, Users Benefit from Powerful Geographical Profiling, Convoy Analysis and Common Vehicle Identification Capabilities
ELSAG CEO Mark Windover is the guest with Coach Ron on Business of Life, an afternoon talk show out of Ventura County, California. Coach Ron talks with Mark about the ins and outs of LRP.
State troopers assigned to Operation Impact in the City of Buffalo made arrests in two stolen-car cases— at almost the same time using ELSAG's MPH-900 License Plate Recognition System.
Over the course of forty days the machines recorded 46 possible citations that would be mailed to the owners of vehicles that allegedly passed the school bus while stopped. The state has thousands of school buses in its fleet.
ALBANY -- Cameras on school buses at three school districts in New York this year nabbed dozens of drivers who illegally passed stopped buses, prompting calls to expand the pilot program statewide.
Since April 2009, a school bus in the Bethlehem Central School District has been equipped with a camera that has been observing motorists who pass stopped school buses illegally. The camera was part of a demonstration project operated through the New York Association for Pupil Transportation and supported by a grant from the Governor's Traffic Safety Committee and the National Highway Traffic Safety Committee.
With this new operations center an officer can constantly be aware of every license plate being read and each hit that all of the deployed systems pick up instantly. The plates that are picked up appear immediately on the screen along with a map of the location where the plates were read. The new center has a running counter of all the hits that come up on each mission.
With the partnership, All Traffic Solutions is going to offer their speed zone message sign with ELSAG’s MPH-900® camera so when a driver’s speed shows up on the sign, it will also appear with their license plate number, letting the driver know that the speed and accompanying message is directed at them.
DENVER -- ELSAG North America (www.elsag.com), market leader in Automatic License Plate Recognition (ALPR) technology with its Mobile Plate Hunter-900 (MPH-900®) is proud to celebrate their 5th anniversary at this year’s IACP conference, the law enforcement industry’s most storied and important conference. Erik Estrada, famed actor who captured the hearts of millions as California Highway Patrol Motorcycle Officer “Ponch” in the hit TV series CHiP’s is on hand at ELSAG’s booth # 2946 to join in the celebration, take pictures and sign autographs.
There's a new high-tech device on the roads in Upper Moreland, and it spells trouble for car thieves, wanted criminals and other lawbreakers.
The gadget is called the Mobile Plate Hunter-900. Since going on patrol with police about two weeks ago, the plate hunter has led to the arrest of a retail thief who might have escaped without the device's 21st Century technology.
During the test drive more than 500 license plates were recorded, and in just 30 minutes police were notified of a possible stolen vehicle. Officers verified the car was linked to a carjacking and they arrested the driver, who had outstanding warrants for carjacking and assault.
Ever worry that some of the people you share the roads with aren't supposed to be driving? The Minnesota State Patrol is using new technology to catch drivers who hit the road with suspended licenses.
"I wouldn't know that they would have warrants on them or expired tags," he said of drivers he passes on the street daily. "It frees up my hands so I can just focus on driving. And it's quick. It's really nice."
The Richland County Sheriff's Department is the first in the state to begin using a new ALPR technology to find stolen cars and stolen license tags. It's a camera and computer system called the Mobile Plate Hunter 900, which uses two cameras mounted on the patrol car and a laptop computer inside.
New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services Publishes Suggested Guidelines For The Operation Of License Plate Readers For Law Enforcement Agencies In New York State.