Monitoring Devices

(OTCBB: SCRA – SecureAlert, Inc.) LATEST NEWS!!

SecureAlert, Inc. Makes History by Signing First-Ever GPS Offender Monitoring Contract in Brazil, Following Passage of New National Law SANDY, UT, Aug 19, 2010 — SecureAlert, Inc. (OTCBB: SCRA), a national leader in offender intervention and tracking technologies widely utilized by public safety agencies throughout the United States, and now expanding globally, together with International Surveillance Services Corporation, its Latin American distribution partner and Empresa Brasileira de Seguranca Ltda., its local monitoring partner, announce the very first GPS offender monitoring contract ever to be signed in the history of Brazil.

On Monday, August 16, 2010 the Superintendent of Correctional Services (SUSEPE) Mario Santa Maria Junior, in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, signed an emergency contract with the Company through SecureAlert’s Brazilian partners to immediately deploy 200 of the Company’s TrackerPAL II(e) devices on offenders located in and around the metropolitan area of Porto Alegre. SUSEPE has already identified an initial 256 eligible offenders to participate in the program and has also communicated the need to publish requirements by the end of August 2010 for an additional 800 offenders to be monitored, while forecasting growth to 5,000 offenders in total, as offender electronic monitoring is introduced statewide throughout Rio Grande do Sul going forward.

SecureAlert, Inc., together with its partners in Latin America, have worked for the last three years to create awareness and to demonstrate the advantages and benefits of offender monitoring technologies within Brazil and surrounding countries. The recognition of these efforts culminated on June 16, 2010 when Law 12.258 was approved and published by Luis Inacio Lula da Silva (President of Brazil). The law authorizes offender electronic monitoring throughout Brazil, subject to certain conditions. The law signed by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva amends the Penal Code and the Penal Execution Law to provide for such monitoring and includes sanctions for non-compliance by offender participants.

“This is a historical moment for SecureAlert, as it paves the way for additional contracts and opportunities that the Company has pending throughout the Region,” said John Hastings President and Chief Operating Officer of SecureAlert. “Brazil in particular is very progressive in its thinking and creation of re-socialization initiatives, providing visionary support for both public safety and offender re-entry solutions, wherein electronic monitoring serves as one of many new tools and technologies that the government will utilize to successfully implement revolutionary correctional programs,” said Mr. Hastings.

Mr. Hastings further noted that over the past year, “SecureAlert and its proprietary TrackerPAL technologies and intervention solutions have received a great deal of recognition and public support, as illustrated by numerous articles and media coverage throughout Brazil, where the Company has successfully demonstrated and piloted its technologies for several state governments.” About SecureAlert SecureAlert is a leading edge, patented monitoring, case management and advanced communications Technology Company with a portfolio of services widely utilized by law enforcement agencies, judicial districts and county jurisdictions across the United States, and growing globally. Through its SecureAlert Monitoring, Inc. subsidiary, SecureAlert observes and tracks offenders wherever they may be — in their car, home or office. SecureAlert offers the only single-piece device which incorporates GPS tracking technology, 90 decibel alarm with 3-way voice, text and data communications, all of which interacts with real time intervention monitoring services, unrivaled in the industry. The SecureAlert programs allow probationers and paroled offenders to re-enter society by holding them accountable 24 hours a day, every day, supporting rehabilitation initiatives and providing for enhanced public safety, while reducing the overall burdens and costs carried by the criminal justice and corrections systems.


Lawsuit accuses GPS firm of aiding domestic abuse

NOTE: The device mentioned in this article was for a vehicle, not a person.
We hope they throw the book at this guy!

By Bruce Vielmetti of the Journal Sentinel

Should a company that provides GPS tracking service be liable for domestic violence inflicted with the help of that technology?

A Milwaukee County lawsuit claims it should.

The use of GPS by offenders to stalk their victims is nothing new, but advocates for victims of domestic violence on the local, state and national level say they have never heard of a victim suing a GPS service.

The lawsuit claims a Missouri company, Foxtrax Vehicle Tracking Inc., aided and abetted “Jack Doe” to commit assault and battery on “Jane Doe” in 2008, including while she was seven months pregnant. The suit does not state so specifically, but implies that Jack Doe installed a tracking device on Jane Doe’s vehicle.

The civil complaint, filed this week in Milwaukee County Circuit Court, names Jack Doe, Foxtrax and “as yet unidentified co-conspirators” as defendants. It says Jane and Jack Doe had a domestic partnership that began in March 2007, and that he was abusive and threatening toward her, “for the sole purpose of restraining the liberty and freedom of movement” of Jane Doe.

The parties’ real names were not used because Jane Doe fears retaliation, according to the suit.

Her attorney, Thomas Napierala of Bayside, said his client’s fear also prevented her from reporting the assaults to police or seeking a restraining order.

Foxtrax officials did not return calls seeking comment Friday.

Carmen Pitre, who heads the Sojourner Family Peace Center in Milwaukee, said that in the context of an abusive relationship, abusers will use anything at their disposal to control their victims.

“New technology has opened the universe wide and given abusers an array of tools,” she said. “It’s hard to protect against all that.”

The lawsuit also claims that Foxtrax at some point was notified of the situation involving Jane Doe, “but refused to discontinue aiding and abetting” Jack Doe, “purely for the sake of profit.”

If that was proven, Pitre said, it would be even more problematic.

Tony Gilbart, of the Wisconsin Coalition Against Domestic Violence, said a bill in the state Assembly this year would have made it a crime to track someone by GPS without their consent. There was no companion bill in the Senate, he said.

While Gilbart acknowledges abusers would not likely follow that law and notify their targets, he said such a law would provide another enforcement tool against those who would use GPS to stalk people.

Gilbart also said the Milwaukee County lawsuit should remind anyone who thinks they might be subject of unwanted tracking or stalking to have their vehicle checked for a GPS transponder and to call their cell phone company to see if anyone else has access to their location if their cell phone has GPS.

Cindy Southworth, who founded a project that tracks technology with the National Network to End Domestic Violence, in Washington D.C., also said she had not heard of any lawsuits by domestic violence victims against GPS tracking services for vicarious liability.

“I would honestly love to see some,” she said, “especially against those companies that blatantly advertise spying on your spouse.”

That doesn’t appear to be the situation in the Milwaukee County case. According to its Web site, Foxtrax primarily aims to serve companies with vehicle fleets that wish to increase security, efficiency and accountability. But it does indicate that low-level service can be purchased to track a single vehicle.

Napierala said he believes Jack Doe had no other legitimate reason to buy the service other than to follow Jane Doe.


State of Surveillance: California’s Growing Use of GPS

California leads the country in GPS supervision. The article below explores how California law enforcement is increasingly relying on the technology. Watch the accompanying video to find out what happened when reporter Jude Joffe-Block was strapped with a GPS ankle bracelet.

State of Surveillance: California’s Growing Use of GPS

Law enforcement agencies across the country are using GPS technology more and more to probationers and parolees. But nowhere in the nation is the technology more prevalent than in California, where use of GPS ankle bracelets is expanding.

The number of Californians tracked on GPS monitors jumped after voters approved Proposition 83—a 2006 ballot initiative also known as “Jessica’s Law” that mandated lifetime GPS monitoring for convicted sex offenders released from prison. As a result, three years later parole authorities implemented GPS monitoring of all of the state’s roughly 6,500 paroled sex offenders—the largest population tracked in the U.S. After the initiative passed, more county probation offices across the state also invested in GPS units.

Parole agents can use the bracelets to monitor whether individuals are complying with home curfews, mandatory treatment programs, or staying away from restricted zones, such as a victim’s home or places where children congregate. They can also use the technology to determine an individual’s current location or review their movements over a certain period of time.

“California has been ahead of the curve using these mechanisms,” said University of California Hastings College of the Law professor, Hadar Aviram. “Particularly with its decision to monitor all registered sex offenders using GPS.”

While sex offender supervision initially drove California’s GPS trend, law enforcement agencies across the state are beginning to use electronic monitoring to track other kinds of offenders and as an alternative to incarceration.

At the start of the year, the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation began expanding its use of GPS supervision to track the most dangerous gang members on parole. So far, about 800 gang members are tracked across the state and the department says 200 more will be added in the coming months.

Stanislaus County in the Central Valley originally acquired 20 bracelets from GPS vendor B.I. Incorporated at a cost of $8.70 a day each to comply with sex offender supervision requirements. Now the county uses the technology to help enforce a gang injunction against Norteño gang members in a southern Modesto neighborhood.

“It became clear to me very quickly that the technology shouldn’t be limited to just sex offenders,” said Stanislaus County Chief Probation Officer, Jerry Powers. “And frankly, the technology might not be best utilized by sex offenders. It might be better utilized by other offenders.”

Since the gang injunction prevents named gang members from associating or being out past 10 p.m. in a certain Modesto neighborhood, probation officers can use GPS data to check whether probationers are compliant and send violators to jail.

Powers says GPS monitoring works well when geography plays into offenders’ criminal activity, such as is the case with gangs or domestic violence cases with restraining orders in place. In contrast, he said, GPS data is not as likely to reveal clues about whether or not a sex offender is reoffending.

Putting GPS devices on gang members can also provide law enforcement with additional insights into how the gang operates.

“It is kind of like a second pair of eyes for us,” said Froilan Mariscal, a criminal investigator with the Stanislaus County District Attorney’s office.

“The stigma of having the GPS on them made them persona non grata with their gang friends,” said Powers. “If they were there, that meant that we knew that they were there.”

Some police and sheriff’s departments have formed partnerships with parole that allow the agencies to tap into the GPS software to find out if a parolee with an ankle bracelet was at the scene of an unsolved local crime.

“That has helped us make some arrests,” said Kurt Smith, Crime Analysis Manager at the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department. “It has helped us prove who potential suspects were.”

Some agencies are looking to GPS and other forms of electronic monitoring as a solution to overcrowded jails and prisons.

California parole authorities are piloting a program that uses electronic monitoring to place parole violators on home arrest, instead of sending than send them back to prison. With the technology, parole agents will know when parolees are inside their homes and when they are not.

UCLA public policy professor Mark Kleiman says expanding this form of so-called “virtual incarceration” is the answer to California’s prison crisis.

Kleiman says that if the supervision on an offender in his own home is sufficiently strict, “You can fully punish him for what he did in the past and prevent him from what he might do in the future—without paying his room and board bill.”

Kurt Smith at the San Diego County Sheriff’s office said his department is researching how it might possibly use GPS technology as an alternative to jail in the future. “Is there justice in sentencing that includes GPS monitoring rather than incarceration?” Smith asked. “That is the question we have.”

Despite the growth in use of the technology, corrections leaders are still quick to point out that law enforcement’s use of the technology is still at a formative stage.

“The GPS as a supervision tool is an ever-evolving new technology,” said Scott Kernan, undersecretary for the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

So far, the state’s prominent sex offender supervision program has not been without controversy. The program drew criticism after it was revealed that parole agents did not review the movements of sex offenders enlisted on the state’s “passive” GPS monitoring program for sex offenders classified as low risk offenders. Phillip Garrido, the man who is accused of kidnapping Jaycee Lee Dugard and holding her prisoner for 18 years, was outfitted with a GPS ankle bracelet in 2008, but wasn’t closely watched. While convicted child molester John Gardner wore a GPS bracelet, he violated his parole numerous times, but the transgressions went undetected. Less than a year and a half after he was released from parole, he raped and murdered two teenage girls.

Parole authorities have convened a taskforce of experts this summer to revise the protocols for how parole officers utilize GPS data to make sex offender supervision more effective.

Dave DeGeorge of Satellite Tracking of People, a GPS vendor that holds several contracts in California, says while GPS is a valuable tool, the public should not expect the technology to stop a determined offender from committing new crimes.

“It is not a silver bullet,” said DeGeorge. “It is not going to prevent crime. I want to make sure that everyone in this ballpark understands what it can and can’t do.”

Credits

Production by Helene Goupil and Jude Joffe-Block
Videography by Armand Emamdjomeh, Helene Goupil, Jude Joffe-Block and Guilherme Kfouri
Story by Jude Joffe-Block

Rapist escapes, Tucson mom wants answers

TUCSON – Manuel Garcia is a Tucson man charged with raping two University of Arizona students 18 months apart.

On July 9th a jury found him guilty on 19 counts. But Garcia didn’t show-up for court. He was wearing a GPS equipped, ankle monitor which he may have cut off.

Now, there are multiple court filings to determine how it happened, and who’s to blame.

With her daughter’s rapist on the loose this mom asked News 4 to conceal her identity.

“It is now four and a half years and we haven’t had closure, and I’m really concerned about victim’s rights,” she says.

She feels the system failed, from Garcia’s initial indictment, to his release hearing, to now.

“And that’s why I wanted to take this to the Attorney General’s office, I want to send a clear message it’s not okay,”

With her complaint formally filed, she says the AG’s office is now investigating.

News 4 dug deeper and found Pima County’s top attorney herself wants answers too.

Court documents show Barbara Lawall wants a court to hear what measures were taken by the bail bondsman and a pre-trial services employee to monitor Garcia using a GPS anklet. Neither were available for comment.

By phone, Lawall tells News 4′s Rebecca Taylor that she can’t comment on pending cases. Manuel Garcia while convicted, and still on the run has yet to be sentenced.

With that and two prior drug convictions, this mom fears Garcia could re-offend.

“And now he’s facing a very long sentence, so he has nothing to lose, and I fear the Tucson community could be at risk.”

She also hopes the court system will fix its breakdown to prevent another wanted-man from escaping justice.

Garcia is described as Hispanic man, 5’9, 180 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes.

Detectives say, he has a very distinctive tattoo behind his left ear. He should be considered armed and dangerous. If you know anything please call 911.


Prison Without Walls

Incarceration in America is a failure by almost any measure. But what if the prisons could be turned inside out, with convicts released into society under constant electronic surveillance? Radical though it may seem, early experiments suggest that such a science-fiction scenario might cut crime, reduce costs, and even prove more just.

By Graeme Wood

Image credit: Fredrik Broden  

One snowy night last winter, I walked into a pizzeria in Morrisville, Pennsylvania, with my right pant leg hiked up my shin. A pager-size black box was strapped to my sockless ankle, and another, somewhat larger unit dangled in a holster on my belt. Together, the two items make up a tracking device called the BI ExacuTrack AT: the former is designed to be tamper-resistant, and the latter broadcasts the wearer’s location to a monitoring company via GPS. The device is commonly associated with paroled sex offenders, who wear it so authorities can keep an eye on their movements. Thus my experiment: an online guide had specified that the restaurant I was visiting was a “family” joint. Would the moms and dads, confronted with my anklet, identify me as a possible predator and hustle their kids back out into the cold? 

Well, no, not in this case. Not a soul took any notice of the gizmos I wore. The whole rig is surprisingly small and unobtrusive, and it allowed me to eat my slice in peace. Indeed, over the few days that I posed as a monitored man, the closest I came to feeling a real stigma was an encounter I had at a Holiday Inn ice machine, where a bearded trucker type gave me a wider berth than I might otherwise have expected. All in all, it didn’t seem like such a terrible fate. 

Unlike most of ExacuTrack’s clientele, of course, I wore my device by choice and only briefly, to find out how it felt and how people reacted to it. By contrast, a real sex offender—or any of a variety of other lawbreakers, including killers, check bouncers, thieves, and drug users—might wear the unit or one like it for years, or even decades. He (and the offender is generally a “he”) would wear it all day and all night, into the shower and under the sheets—perhaps with an AC adapter cord snaking out into a wall socket for charging. The device would enable the monitoring company to follow his every move, from home to work to the store, and, in consultation with a parole or probation officer, to keep him away from kindergartens, playgrounds, Jonas Brothers concerts, and other places where kids congregate. Should he decide to snip off the anklet (the band is rubber, and would succumb easily to pruning shears), a severed cable would alert the company that he had tampered with the unit, and absent a very good excuse he would likely be sent back to prison. Little wonder that the law-enforcement officer who installed my ExacuTrack noted that he was doing me a favor by unboxing a fresh unit: over their lifetimes, many of the trackers become encrusted with the filth and dead skin of previous bearers, some of whom are infected with prison plagues such as herpes or hepatitis. Officers clean the units and replace the straps between users, but I strongly preferred not to have anything rubbing against my ankle that had spent years rubbing against someone else’s. 

Increasingly, GPS devices such as the one I wore are looking like an appealing alternative to conventional incarceration, as it becomes ever clearer that, in the United States at least, traditional prison has become more or less synonymous with failed prison. By almost any metric, our practice of locking large numbers of people behind bars has proved at best ineffective and at worst a national disgrace. According to a recent Pew report, 2.3 million Americans are currently incarcerated—enough people to fill the city of Houston. Since 1983, the number of inmates has more than tripled and the total cost of corrections has jumped sixfold, from $10.4 billion to $68.7 billion. In California, the cost per inmate has kept pace with the cost of an Ivy League education, at just shy of $50,000 a year. 

This might make some sense if crime rates had also tripled. But they haven’t: rather, even as crime has fallen, the sentences served by criminals have grown, thanks in large part to mandatory minimums and draconian three-strikes rules—politically popular measures that have shown little deterrent effect but have left the prison system overflowing with inmates. The vogue for incarceration might also make sense if the prisons repaid society’s investment by releasing reformed inmates who behaved better than before they were locked up. But that isn’t the case either: half of those released are back in prison within three years. Indeed, research by the economists Jesse Shapiro of the University of Chicago and M. Keith Chen of Yale indicates that the stated purpose of incarceration, which is to place prisoners under harsh conditions on the assumption that they will be “scared straight,” is actively counterproductive. Such conditions—and U.S. prisons are astonishingly harsh, with as many as 20 percent of male inmates facing sexual assault—typically harden criminals, making them more violent and predatory. Essentially, when we lock someone up today, we are agreeing to pay a large (and growing) sum of money merely to put off dealing with him until he is released in a few years, often as a greater menace to society than when he went in. 

Devices such as the ExacuTrack, along with other advances in both the ways we monitor criminals and the ways we punish them for their transgressions, suggest a revolutionary possibility: that we might turn the conventional prison system inside out for a substantial number of inmates, doing away with the current, expensive array of guards and cells and fences, in favor of a regimen of close, constant surveillance on the outside and swift, certain punishment for any deviations from an established, legally unobjectionable routine. The potential upside is enormous. Not only might such a system save billions of dollars annually, it could theoretically produce far better outcomes, training convicts to become law-abiders rather than more-ruthless lawbreakers. The ultimate result could be lower crime rates, at a reduced cost, and with considerably less inhumanity in the bargain. 

Moreover, such a change would in fact be less radical than it might at first appear. An underappreciated fact of our penitentiary system is that of all Americans “serving time” at any given moment, only a third are actually behind bars. The rest—some 5 million of them—are circulating among the free on conditional supervised release either as parolees, who are freed from prison before their sentences conclude, or as probationers, who walk free in lieu of jail time. These prisoners-on-the-outside have in fact outnumbered the incarcerated for decades. And recent innovations, both technological and procedural, could enable such programs to advance to a stage where they put the traditional model of incarceration to shame. 

In a number of experimental cases, they already have. Devices such as the one I wore on my leg already allow tens of thousands of convicts to walk the streets relatively freely, impeded only by the knowledge that if they loiter by a schoolyard, say, or near the house of the ex-girlfriend they threatened, or on a street corner known for its crack trade, the law will come to find them. Compared with incarceration, the cost of such surveillance is minuscule—mere dollars per day—and monitoring has few of the hardening effects of time behind bars. Nor do all the innovations being developed depend on technology. Similar efforts to control criminals in the wild are under way in pilot programs that demand adherence to onerous parole guidelines, such as frequent, random drug testing, and that provide for immediate punishment if the parolees fail. The result is the same: convicts who might once have been in prison now walk among us unrecognized—like pod people, or Canadians. 

There are, of course, many thousands of dangerous felons who can’t be trusted on the loose. But if we extended this form of enhanced, supervised release even to just the nonviolent offenders currently behind bars, we would empty half our prison beds in one swoop. Inevitably, some of those released would take the pruning-shears route. And some would offend again. But then, so too do those convicts released at the end of their brutal, hardening sentences under our current system. And even accepting a certain failure rate, by nearly any measure such “prisons without bars” would represent a giant step forward for justice, criminal rehabilitation, and society. 

In the 18th century, the English philosopher and social theorist Jeremy Bentham designed the Panopticon, a hypothetical prison. Inside the Panopticon (the name is derived from the Greek word for “all-seeing”), the prisoners are arranged in a ring of cells surrounding their guard, who is concealed in a tower in the center. The idea is that the guard controls the prisoners through his presumed observation: they constantly imagine his eyes on them, even when he’s looking elsewhere. Bentham promoted the concept of the Panopticon for much the same reasons that spur criminal-justice innovation today—a ballooning prison population and the need for a cheap solution with light manpower demands. Whereas the guard in Bentham’s day had only two eyes, however, today’s watcher can be virtually all-seeing, thanks to GPS monitoring technology. The modern prisoner, in other words, need not wonder whether he is being observed; he can be sure that he is, and at all times. 

The hub of the American penal system’s largest open-air Panopticon is in the Indianapolis suburb of Anderson, population 57,496, at the call center of a company called BI Incorporated. The firm manufactures and services the ankle device I test-drove, as well as a suite of other law-enforcement gadgets designed to track offenders. Though BI has a handful of rivals in the monitoring business, it is the most prominent and best-known, with 55,000 offenders wearing BI anklets at any given moment. (The company monitors another 10,000 using lower-tech means: for instance, by having them call from particular landlines at designated times.) 

I drove to Anderson from Indianapolis, past clapboard houses and cornfields, to visit BI’s offices, located on a few discreet and highly secure floors above the local branch of KeyBank. I was buzzed up to meet Jennifer White, the BI vice president in charge of monitoring. From her office window, we looked out not on the backs of the 30,000 offenders this branch monitors, but on the sedate midwestern bedroom community that is, by her description, “a little bit less happening than Muncie,” 20 miles away. Even the sleepy streets of Anderson have their secrets, though. White told me that below us were about 120 criminals with BI anklets—roughly one for every 500 residents in the town. 

White, an Indiana native, has been at BI since 1988. Over a turkey salad from Bob Evans, she explained that the company’s first “clients” (as the monitored are always called) were not human beings but Holsteins. In 1978, BI began selling systems that allowed dairy farmers to dispense feed to their cows automatically. The company fitted a radio-frequency tag on each cow’s ear so that when the cow approached the feed dispenser, a sensor in the latter caused it to drop a ration of fodder. If the same cow returned, the sensor recognized the unique signal of the tag and prevented the cow from getting a second helping until after enough time had passed for her to digest the first. (The worlds of bovine and criminal management have in fact been oddly intertwined for many years. Just as modern abattoirs have studied the colors that can distract and agitate cows during their final moments—thus ruining their meat with adrenaline—prisons have painted their walls in soothing shades to minimize anxiety and aggression in their inmates.) 

In the 1980s, BI expanded into “tethering people.” As an early mover in the outpatient prison industry, BI grew fast, and the Anderson office contains a one-room museum of the bulky devices from its early days, some the size of a ham-radio set. The company now counts tracking people as its core business, and as a sideline it facilitates their reentry into society, through treatment programs and counseling. BI monitors criminals in all 50 states, “everyone from people who owe child support to ax murderers,” White told me. Most use the lowest-tech tracking equipment, a radio-frequency-based technology that monitors house arrest. The system works simply: you keep a radio beacon in your home and a transmitter around your ankle. If you wander too far from your beacon, an alert goes out to the BI call center in Anderson, which then notifies your probation officer that you have left your designated zone—as Martha Stewart allegedly did during her BI-monitored house arrest in 2005, earning a three-week extension of her five-month sentence. 

The truly revolutionary BI devices, though, are the new generation of GPS trackers, which monitor criminals’ real-time locations down to a few meters, enabling BI to control their movements almost as if they were marionettes. If you were a paroled drunk driver, for instance, your parole officer could mandate that you stay home every day from dusk until dawn, be at your workplace from nine to five, and go to and from work following a specific route—and BI would monitor your movements to ensure compliance. If your parole terms included not entering a bar or liquor shop, the device could be programmed to start an alert process if you lingered near such a location for more than 60 seconds. That alert could take the form of an immediate notice to the monitors—“He’s at Drinkie’s again”—or even a spoken warning emanating from the device itself, instructing you to leave the area or face the consequences. Another BI system, recently deployed with promising results, features an electrostatic pad that presses against the offender’s upper arm at all times, chemically “tasting” sweat for signs of alcohol. (In May, starlet Lindsay Lohan was ordered to wear a similar device, manufactured by a BI competitor, after violating her probation stemming from DUI charges.) 

To see the BI systems at work is to realize that Jeremy Bentham was thinking small. The call center consists of just a few rows of desks, with a dozen or so men and women wearing headsets and speaking in Spanish and English to their “customers” (the law-enforcement agents, as distinguished from the tracked “clients”). Each sits in front of a computer monitor, and at the click of a mouse can summon up a screen detailing the movements of a client as far away as Guam, ensuring not only that he avoids “exclusion zones”—schoolyards or bars or former associates’ homes, depending on the circumstances—but also that he makes his way to designated “inclusion zones” at appointed times. 

As a fail-safe against any technological glitch, whether accidental or malicious, BI is immensely proud of its backup systems, which boast an ultrasecure data room and extreme redundancy: if, say, a toxic-gas cloud were to wipe out the town of Anderson, the last act of the staff there would be to flip the switches diverting all call traffic to BI’s corporate office in Boulder, Colorado, where a team capable of taking over instantly in case of disaster is always on duty. 

I asked Jamie Roberts, a call-center employee who had previously been a BI customer as a corrections officer in Terre Haute, Indiana, to show me a parolee on the move, and in seconds he pulled up the profile of a criminal in Newport News, Virginia. The young man’s parole officer had used a Microsoft Bing online map to build a large irregular polygon around his high school—an inclusion zone that would guarantee an alert if he failed to show up for class on time, every day. Roberts showed me one offender after another: names and maps, lives scheduled down to the minute. There was a gambler whose anklet was set to notify Roberts if the client approached the waterfront, because he might try his luck on the gaming boats; an addict who couldn’t return to the street corners where he used to score crack; and an alcohol abuser who had to squeeze himself into an inclusion zone around a church basement for an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting from 9 to 10 p.m., three times a week. 

A strict parole officer could plausibly sketch out a complete weekly routine for his parolee, with specific times when he would have to leave home and specific stations he would have to tag throughout the week. He might allow, or even require, the parolee to go to the grocery store on a Sunday afternoon, and go for a jog along an authorized route every morning. Roberts pulled up another Bing map for me, and set in motion a faster-than-real-time playback of one client’s day. As his dot carefully skirted the exclusion zones around a school and a park, staying away from kids because of the absolute certainty that BI would report him if he did not, his life on the outside looked fully set out in advance, as if he moved not on his own feet but on rails laid by his parole officer. For BI clients, technology has made detection of any deviation a near certainty—and with detection a swift response, one that often leads straight back to the Big House.


Types of House Arrest Monitors

Ankle Monitors

  • For this type of house arrest, the offender must wear a monitor on his ankle at all times. Shaped like a small pager, the monitor is strapped to his ankle and generally includes some kind of radio frequency or Global Positioning System (GPS) technology that allows law enforcement to monitor his movements 24 hours a day. It also alerts officials if he leaves the permitted premises. The bracelet is usually waterproof. It is the criminal’s responsibility to keep the device charged and working throughout the period of house arrest. Most ankle monitors have multiple tamper-protections; if an offender tries to remove or open the device, or if it runs out of power, authorities are immediately informed. The cost of home monitoring is sometimes incurred at the expense of the violator.
  • Voice Curfew

  • Voice curfew is a cheaper alternative to an ankle monitor. In this system, the violator is not required to wear any sort of device on his person. Instead, he simply must have a phone line at the house and workplace at all times. At scheduled times, he will be called by the voice curfew company and will have to report in. Voice-detection technology is used to verify voice authenticity. The criminal is subject to random calling and must respond to these phone calls as well; if not, the voice curfew company will report this to authorities.
  • Alcohol Monitoring

  • Because offenders are typically not allowed to consume alcohol while under house arrest, certain kinds of home-monitoring devices are designed to detect alcohol consumption. One, a type of ankle bracelet, is capable of detecting changes in an offender’s blood alcohol content (BAC) via skin contact. Another alcohol monitoring system is a picture breathalyzer; at random intervals, the offender must blow into the breathalyzer that has been installed in his house. The breathalyzer measures BAC and features a camera mount, which takes a picture during the test to ensure that it is indeed the offender who is using the breathalyzer.
  • Read more: Types of House Arrest Monitors | eHow.co.uk http://www.ehow.co.uk/list_6818642_types-house-arrest-monitors.html#ixzz0w99dnDoS


    HuffPost Innovator Series – GPS Monitoring Solutions: Keeping Victims Safer

    HuffPost Innovator Series

    If the economic recovery is going to happen any time soon, these are the kind of companies that will be leading the way.

    As the economy continues to struggle and the job crisis mounts, HuffPost Business set out to find the companies that are both changing the way we think of business and creating badly needed jobs. In the first edition of our HuffPost Innovator Series, we sifted through more than 200 submissions from HuffPost readers who nominated ground-breaking companies from around the country. Some of the most promising are doing more than just innovating with technology. One company is turning cell phones into a potentially revolutionary tool for the blind; another is re-imagining of the common electrical socket; and two start-ups brought powerful efficiency to the worlds of student lending and volunteering.

    To submit an innovative entrepreneur, startup or established company, click “Participate” below and upload a short description and picture of the founder or business leader you’d like to nominate. (Note: Please skip the marketing jargon and keep your descriptions short.) If your story is compelling, a HuffPost staffer will contact you to learn more about your story.

    Which company is the most innovative? Check out the HuffPost Innovators Series below:

    Victim Notification System

    The current system used to track individuals who’ve had restraining orders filed against them is flawed and Petra Fuhriman, owner of GPS Monitoring Solutions, is out to fix it.

    Fuhriman’s brainchild is a tamper-proof bracelet with a strap that fits around the ankle of a domestic violence offender complete with mobile devices that enable both victim and offender to monitor each other’s distance.

    How is this different than any other GPS monitoring device? “It’s the only device of its kind that has real-time monitoring,” Fuhriman explains.

    Current devices merely send an e-mail alert to authorities when offenders violate the court-mandated stay-away distance. As a result, authorities often don’t respond to the e-mail alerts in a timely fashion — “in certain California counties, there are backlogs of up to 31,000 alerts,” says Furhriman.

    When offenders violate the stay-away distance, the device sends an instant alert to the victim, the police and GPS’s internal monitoring staff, on call 24/7, who immediately call the police department.

    Furhriman founded her firm in January 2009, and her clients include attorneys seeking reduced bail, alternative sentencing or pre-trial release for the offenders they represent.
    – Nathaniel Cahners Hindman

    Petra Fuhriman:
    GPS Monitoring Solutions is driven to protect victims from domestic violence, and we ask for your help in letting the citizens of your state know about our life saving devises. (Our Motto is Safety Fast-Safety Now.) We as a team can make a valuable difference in your communities. Using GPS with Victim Notification in Restraining Orders, the intended victim is alerted in real-time, and ahead of time that the person monitored is getting close to violating the Stay-away distance. The intended victim is also alerted should someone begin tampering the bracelet. Again, in real time. For the first time in their lives potential victims have the ability ahead of time to leave the area and save their own Life. “begin tampering the bracelet. Again, in real time. For the first time in their lives potential victims have the ability ahead of time to leave the area and save their own Life. “


    A GPS Tool for Both the Road and Water

    Are you looking for the ideal marine GPS navigational tool? Today there are plenty of possibilities to choose from. If you are looking at total fishfinder or chartplotter programs, take a look at companies like Humminbird, Garmin and Lowrance to name some big companies to think about.

    You might want to choose a solution like the Lowrance 600c GPS system that is very unique for the reason that it serves two purposes. This GPS device may be used either on the water while traveling in your boat or throughout the road system in your vehicle. Buying this particular model is definitely a the best value for your money. Simply take the complete system from one method of transportation to the other.

    Next let’s review just a few of the functions that will help you to effortlessly do just that.

    The marine mode of this navigational system contains normal standard functions that you would find with any chartplotter product. It has the traditional point-to-point routing and the ability to mark, save and retrace your favorite locations throughout the waterway. It also contains a wide variety of marine type graphics and colors to choose from.

    The unique MapCreate system of the Lowrance 600c includes 1000s of superior maps of U.S. lakes and comes with complete contours of inland waterways. The model additionally includes a satellite point of view which is useful in locating yourself in terms of adjacent waterways or other landmarks which will help considerably when moving in your cruiser.

    While the unit is in highway setting navigation, you have access to each of the usual capabilities of normal vehicle GPS models. This consists of road directions for the U.S. and Canada that are pre-loaded into the machine. Relating to your exhibit setting, you could decide among Three different possibilities which include 2D Track Up, 2-D North Up and the Elevated 3-D choice. It consists of regular turn by turn visual and audio communications that will guide you in instructions. In the event you overlook a turn or get off track somewhere, the program will recalculate your instructions, getting you back on your way with ease.

    An additional selection incorporated with this GPS device is the ability to look up street addresses and storage of up to 1,000 addresses at any given time. Auto-routing possibilities permit you the ability to avoid Interstate or Toll streets and you can additionally utilize this alternative to avoid turning left if you’d prefer. Additionally there is a safety passenger setting that allows the guest in your automobile to make use of the GPS capabilities while the car is moving.

    The Lowrance iWay 600c even offers some wonderful additional bonus capabilities. You can find both an Mp3 player and a JPEG photo viewer which lets you save up to 5GB that could include a huge selection of melodies or pics. You can also stream your music wirelessly through an FM radio channel within your vehicle’s audio system. Wish to take the model with you on the run to listen to your music? This is not a problem as it additionally contains a headphone jack in addition to its own internal speaker.

    With all the numerous GPS programs available to you today, you are sure to locate one that will probably fit the bill regardless of whether journeying by boat, car or both. Happy and safe travels.

    By http://gpsrevue.com/


    I PUT A GPS TRACKING DEVICE ON MY WIFE’S CAR AND SHE FOUND OUT AND IS MAD NOW? WHAT GIVES?

    HOW FUNNY
    ____________

    She was putting more miles on the automobile than I grant her to. If there is to many miles on it when it comes ttime to sell it, the resale value will be a lot lower with all the extra miles.
    It is a leased automobile and there is restrictions on the mileage..COME ON ALL YOU MAN HATERS out there..lighten up….

    We found this at http://gsmgpstracking.com/2009/12/i-put-a-gps-tracking-device-on-my-wifes-car-and-she-found-out-and-is-mad-now-what-gives/


    GPSmagazine’s 2010 Child Tracking GPS Buyer’s Guide

    According to the FBI’s National Crime Information Center (NCIC), 814,957 persons were reported missing in 2007. About 80% of those were juveniles (persons under 18 years of age), the overwhelming majority of which were girls.

    While most missing persons return home safely, that statistic shows that over 2,000 times per day, parents or primary care givers felt the disappearance was serious enough to warrant calling law enforcement. Even more troubling, the number of missing persons reported to law enforcement has increased almost 500% in the past 20 years.

    What if, instead of sitting at home in a terrified panic that harm has come to your child, you could instantly locate him or her on a map, pinpointing their exact whereabouts?

    GPS tracking technology continues to improve, and for the first time in years, I can enthusiastically recommend several devices as viable solutions that will help parents keep their children safe.

    I tested 11 different tracking devices, ranging in price from the inexpensive to the extravagant. Interestingly, price doesn’t always equate to better performance.

    Here they are, ranked in order from the best to the worst:

    1. LiveViewGPS PT-10
    2. WorldTracker Enduro
    3. LiveViewGPS PT-8200
    4. WorldTracker GPRS
    5. Amber Alert 2G
    6. P-Trac Micro
    7. WorldTracker PLD
    8. Zoombak GPS Car & Family Locator
    9. SPOT Satellite GPS Messenger
    10. Brickhouse Child Locator With Wander Alerts
    11. Lok8u Nu-M8

     

    Winner: LiveViewGPS PT-10 ($399 + $39.95/month)

    Verdict: The Most Accurate, Easy To Use GPS Tracker Available

    This year’s overall best real-time GPS tracking device is LiveViewGPS’ outstanding PT-10.

    This GPS tracker is easy to use and highly accurate. Operating on ATT’s 3G/Edge network, the PT-10 is about the size of a deck of cards, and reports its location every 20 feet, or 10 seconds when traveling over 10 MPH. Capable of operating from -22 degrees F to 158 degrees F, this tracker is well suited to a variety of applications.

    LiveViewGPS charges $399 for the PT-10 GPS tracker, and $39.99 per month for unlimited use. A well designed web portal displays the PT-10′s current and historical location data, and provides a host of handy reporting options, including aggressive driving, speeding, and Geo-Fence alerts.

    The internal battery provides tracking for up to 8 hours of continuous motion (an internal motion sensor conserves battery power when the tracker isn’t moving), and an optional $195 “Professional Extended Runtime Battery Kit” extends the battery life to approximately 60 hours of continuous movement.

    If the PT-10 enters an area with no AT&T cellular coverage, the device stores location data, and automatically uploads the missing data when it re-enters cellular coverage.

    The PT-10 is the most accurate tracking GPS I’ve tested to date. That accuracy, combined with 10 second updates, means you can literally watch the device move on the map in real-time. For example, when placed inside a car, you can launch any web browser and watch the trip in real time, complete with speed information.

    The PT-10 makes it easy to see not only where the device is currently located, but also where it’s been over the past 90 days. Historical reporting lets you replay any day’s activity over the past 90 days.

    My full, in-depth review can be read HERE.

    Second Place: WorldTracker Enduro/Spark Nano ($199 + Monthly Service)

    Verdict: Fantastically Small, Accurate, and Power Efficient


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