May 26, 2005
Following the first implementation of Motorola's Mobile Video Enforcer (MVE) system this spring in Wilmington, N.C., municipal police agencies in Toledo, Ohio; Southold, N.Y.; Kernersville and Cary, N.C.; and Bossier Parish, La., are now using it.
"The Motorola MVE system offers great picture quality which is crucial when trying to demonstrate in court what happened at the scene of an incident," said Lt. David Holt, Toledo Police Dept.
Previously, Toledo officers used a VHS system mounted in police vehicles. "Officers had to physically take the videotape out of their vehicles and then it had to be cataloged and filed," said Lt. Holt. "If we wanted to locate something on a tape, we had to search through the entire tape looking for the specific video we needed. It was time-consuming and not very efficient."
The Mobile Video Enforcer ($5000-$7000) consists of a Mobile Digital Video Recorder (MDVR) mounted in an officer's vehicle and a Digital Video Management Solution (DVMS) ($2500) located at the police department. The MDVR captures full-motion, DVD quality video that features pre-event and automatic event-triggered recording capabilities. Each video also stores incident and criminal profile information.
The DVMS automatically uploads, archives, and organizes captured video from the MDVR units. Video clips and still images can be retrieved within seconds from the database in a standard format for training or evidentiary purposes. Key video clips also can be exported to DVD and played back on commercially available DVD players for court cases and evidentiary analysis purposes.
Motorola has a variety of public service infrastructure products, mobile terminals and mobile mesh networking.
SOHOware uses a MIMO antenna for 40Mbps video relays. They can also be used to make a wireless bridge to vehicles, creating automatic connections for uploading or downloading data so officers won't have to initiate a connection.
Their AeroGuard combines True MIMO performance with centralized control and management that simplifies network scaling from 1 to thousands of access points. AeroGuard says their combination of features makes it the choice for VAR’s who must support their customer’s WLAN data needs today and their roaming voice / video applications tomorrow.
As more municipal police departments and other law enforcement agencies turn to realtime video capture to support their officer’s activities, they turn to experts packages like these, designed to meet the unique archiving needs of each agency, says Police Technologies.




