Posts Tagged ‘video surveillance’

Unlucky: Man Robbed of $10,000 Won at Casino

By Dawn in Chicago, Crime, Investigations, MSI Detective Services, robbery, Stolen Property, Theft Investigations at December 8th, 2011 | No comments

Good luck quickly changed to bad luck for a Chicago man yesterday. Anyone who has ever gambled at a casino knows the odds of winning $10,000 are not good. This man won the jackpot and then lost it in less time than it probably took to win it.

A 62-year-old Chicago man was robbed of more than $10,000 he had won at a casino less than a half hour earlier.

The victim, an immigrant who speaks little English and lives in low-income housing in Chicago’s Chinatown, was returning from a trip to the Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, Ind., just after 2 a.m. on Wednesday morning when the robbery happened, according to his son, William Chan.

“He parks his car in the parking lot. He’s 20 steps from the front door. He gets out of his car, and all of sudden, someone comes rushing out and wraps his arms around his neck,” Chan told msnbc.com. “Then a second guy come up with a gun.”

As he walked to the front door of his Chinatown apartment, the victim said he saw two young men running toward him. The victim wasn’t able to get inside fast enough and was attacked by the two men.

The men who robbed him told him not to move and demanded all of his money, Chan said. They also robbed him of the chips he had won.

Chan said the robbers struck his father in the forehead and then fled. “He’s okay; the cut wasn’t so deep, but there was a small laceration above his forehead,” he said, adding that his father didn’t need any stitches. Paramedics treated the cut on the scene.

It’s not clear why Chan’s father was targeted, but his son doesn’t think it was random.

“There are only two conclusions, one which I think is a higher possibility,” he said. “He was most likely followed from the casino back to his apartment building. The second possibility is it was a random robbery, which I think is least likely.” He added that many Chinese immigrants who visit area casinos, like his father, have long been targets of thieves who prey on them on their  return.

My first thought was this was not random. I think his son’s theory that his father was followed from the casino is a good one. Maybe the casino can view their security cameras and get some leads on who may have followed Mr. Chan.

The son said, “There are building surveillance cameras, but when we spoke with detectives and the building manager, they said the surveillance cameras didn’t work. I find it hard to believe that there’s a low-income housing building with surveillance cameras that don’t work.”

The robbers haven’t been caught. Chan said the money doesn’t matter, but he’s worried about his father’s safety.

Chan said his father, who speaks little English, was sleeping this morning, trying to recover from his ordeal. Father and son are scheduled to meet with detectives later today.

Read more@ msnbc

Also, read story@ chicagotribune

 

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Police Tracking Your Every Move With License Plate Readers

By Dawn in gps tracker, invasion of privacy, Investigations, MSI Detective Services, Police Records, Privacy, Security at November 28th, 2011 | No comments

Privacy vs. personal freedom. The blurring of online and offline privacy. Concerns that we are becoming a  “surveillance society.” How much of your personal freedoms are you willing to sacrifice to give the police and government the tools they can use to catch criminals? It is a very tough question because it seems the answer depends on whether the use of those tools, such as surveillance cameras or online tracking, are properly used or whether they get abused. For me, the line is crossed when companies or social sites capture my personal information and store it in databases. However, if I or a member of my family were a victim of a crime and it was caught on a surveillance camera, I would be glad if it led to the investigation and capture of the criminal.

The Washington Post is reporting that police in D.C. are beefing up their areas covered by license plate cameras. More than 250 cameras in D.C. and its suburbs are constantly hard at work, grabbing license plate numbers and sticking them into databases. The police aren’t exactly doing this quietly, but it’s being done with “virtually no public debate.”

The highest concentration of these plate readers in the entire nation exists in D.C. (one reader per square mile), so that means that District police are building the biggest location database based on license plates in the whole country.

First, these are apparently different types of cameras than the cameras cities have been affixing near stoplights and other places to catch people running red lights or speeding – the “here’s a ticket 2 weeks later in the mail” cameras.

These plate readers cost about $20,000 each and can snatch images of numbers and letters on cars traveling nearly 150 mph and across four lanes of traffic. These plate readers in D.C. take 1,800 images per minute, every one of which is stored in a database. Read the full article »

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Supreme Court Case Draws Comparisons to Orwell’s “1984″

By Dawn in court cases, Debugging - Electronic Countermeasures, gps tracker, invasion of privacy, MSI Detective Services, Privacy, testimony at November 23rd, 2011 | No comments

Big Brother is Watching You

The Supreme Court case involving the use of a GPS tracking device by federal and local law enforcement in monitoring a suspected drug dealer without a warrant, has generated quite a bit of debate from accredited news agencies, columnists, activists, politicians, and even everyday bloggers. The United States vs. Antoine Jones case was intensely discussed and debated between attorneys and Court Justices on November 8th in Washington, D.C.

During the hour-long deliberation, the “Big Brother” in George Orwell’s influential novel, 1984, was referenced six times.

 

Comparisons of 1984 to U.S. vs. Jones Case

The Justices pondered a world in which satellites can zero in on an individual’s house; where cameras can record the faces of individuals at a crowded intersection; and where individuals can instantly announce their every movement to the world on the Internet and social media sites such as Facebook. And they expressed their concerns about the government placing tracking devices in overcoats or on license plates to monitor the precise location and movements of individuals at all times.

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. asked Deputy Solicitor General, Michael Dreeben, who is representing the government, “How do we deal with this? Do we just say, ‘Well, nothing is changed,’ so that all the information that people expose to the public is fair game?” Essentially, the court is attempting to apply the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects citizens from unreasonable search and seizures, with the use of GPS technology.

Dreeben responded by saying that the court had already settled the greater question: “What a person seeks to preserve as private in the enclave of his own home or in a private letter or inside of his vehicle when he is traveling is a subject of Fourth Amendment protection.” He added: “But what he reveals to the world, such as his movements in a car on a public roadway, is not.” Read the full article »

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Up … and Away! Thief Uses Crane to Steal Jeep

By Dawn in Burlary, hidden cameras, Investigations, MSI Detective Services, robbery, Stolen Property, Theft Investigations at November 2nd, 2011 | No comments

A thief used a crane to lift a Jeep Wrangler off of a northern Indiana car lot.

Surveillance camera footage at LaPorte Chrysler showed someone driving a truck carrying a crane onto the lot, then circling around to park next to the 2008 Wrangler, Chicago NBC station WMAQ reported. Then the thief hooked the Jeep with the crane and loaded it onto a trailer. The entire operation, which occurred at 6:40 a.m., took all of six minutes.

“The Jeep has to be heavily damaged,” The Chicago Tribune quoted dealership general manager Matt Magnuson as saying. ”He clamped into the roof, put the jaws through both doors and lifted it up.”

The two-door Wrangler was bright red with a snowplow. It had been sold and was sitting in the dealership’s back lot.

“The owner thought we were joking with him when we told him it had been lifted out of the lot,” Magnuson said, according to the Tribune. “But once he saw the media coverage of the theft, he realized it wasn’t a joke.”

Police told WSBT-TV that they arrested a single suspect in the case Tuesday. They recovered the crane allegedly used, LaPorte Police Chief of Detectives Adam Klimczak told the station but had not yet found the missing vehicle.

Read story@ msnbc

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