DARK KNIGHT SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM IS HERE IN ATLANTA

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Atlanta police say new surveillance technology helped lead to a quick arrest in the killing of a 6-month-old boy who was shot in his car seat Monday during a gunbattle outside a store.

Connect Atlanta, a network of more than 4,500 surveillance cameras from across the city, will allow officers to pull up footage on their cellphones and laptops from inside their squad cars, before they even get to a scene, the department said Wednesday.


Last fall, the department partnered with Peachtree Corners-based tech company Fusus for new software that allows police to access and share camera feeds in real time. The department already receives thousands of camera feeds from street corners and businesses into its video integration center, but accessing that footage quickly can be difficult and time-consuming, officials said.

“We’re moving from a video integration center to a real-time crime center,” said Bryant, who hopes the new technology will make his officers “much more proactive” when it comes to addressing Atlanta’s spike in crime.
Bryant said the new system led to an arrest in the shooting of 6-month-old Grayson Matthew Fleming-Gray, who died Monday after being caught in the crossfire during a shootout.

Atlanta’s businesses and homeowners can register their cameras with the department free of charge. For a fee, they can integrate their surveillance systems, giving police immediate access to their recordings, said Deputy Chief Michael O’Connor.

Busy destinations such as Mercedes-Benz Stadium and Lenox Square are already integrated into the network, he said. The cost of integrating surveillance footage depends on the number of cameras and how long the data is stored.

O’Connor said one challenge the department faced in the past was that people use different camera systems. The new software, he said, compiles those surveillance feeds into one place regardless of where a camera was purchased.

We can literally integrate any type of camera that anybody owns,” O’Connor said. “We’ve been successful in getting private entities to share their cameras with us ... and we expect this is going to be a very robust system in a very short amount of time.”

By next year, O’Connor estimates the number of Atlanta businesses sharing their camera feeds with police will reach at least 30,000.

“What would have taken going out, knocking on doors and requesting that kind of video can be done within seconds,” he said.

If something happens in a specific neighborhood, investigators will be able to reach out to registered homeowners right away and request their footage, O’Connor said.

It’s connected to our dispatch so that gives us the proactive ability to immediately see the cameras related to calls as they come in and relay that information to officers,” he said. “That’s going to be a game-changer for us.”

Fusus CEO Chris Lindenau said the company was started in June 2019. The system is already in place in 85 communities across the nation, he said, including Minneapolis and Orlando.

The integration system was funded by the Atlanta Police Foundation and will not cost the city anything, according to Chief Operating Officer Marshall Freeman. He declined to provide the specific cost.

O’Connor said he’s hopeful the new system can eventually help deter crime across the city.

“It’s not going to be tomorrow. It may not even be next year. But over time it’s going to be so hard to do anything where you’re not seen by one of these surveillance systems,” he said. “It’s getting harder and harder to do something and get away with it.”


Those wishing to register their cameras can do so at www.connectatlanta.org.
 
As long as it saves lives, lowers crime and ensures the real bad guys get caught I'm 100% for it, the presumed privacy in public places is some bullshit anyway, all this tech might as well use it for some good, plus hard for a cop to lie when the proof is on video so them cameras cut both ways.
 
So when they gone organize the march.

This shit right here is going to put snitches out of business.

First, it was McDonalds, and then it was Walmart with that self-checkout shit.
 
Oh well. Matter of time. I ain’t doin shit so I ain’t worried.

This was mentioned by the Mayor as how they caught today's Midtown shooter. They also likely had video of the 3rd shooting on the street, or followed her pathway leaving the buildings after the first 2 shootings.
 


During the extensive search, security offices at several Midtown towers lent their resources to the police department, and Midtown’s network of security cameras helped track the woman as she fled the scene, he said.
 
always making black cities...a big project...brah

Yeah but honestly we need it.

Rather than having these gang members on the run for months and out doing more dirt in that time, they can be apprehended same day.

Gonna have to weigh public safety vs. privacy. Criminals ain't gonna stop or stay the same. They only getting worse.
 
Yeah but honestly we need it.

Rather than having these gang members on the run for months and out doing more dirt in that time, they can be apprehended same day.

Gonna have to weigh public safety vs. privacy. Criminals ain't gonna stop or stay the same. They only getting worse.

agree...I try my damnest...to be a walking military armory...at all times... brah
 
Yeah but honestly we need it.

Rather than having these gang members on the run for months and out doing more dirt in that time, they can be apprehended same day.

Gonna have to weigh public safety vs. privacy. Criminals ain't gonna stop or stay the same. They only getting worse.
This wasn't a "gang member". This was a black woman that cracked, I wanted her to get away.

Fuck this camera system
 
This wasn't a "gang member". This was a black woman that cracked, I wanted her to get away.

Fuck this camera system

Do we or do we not have a gang problem in Atlanta?

Again, the public safety vs. privacy argument will shape the future of surveillance in this town, but don't think that it's not already this way in many major cities. Doesn't make it 100 percent right but that's what it is.

You essentially can't walk down the street in many cities without being surveilled. This system just makes it real time.
 
Do we or do we not have a gang problem in Atlanta?

Again, the public safety vs. privacy argument will shape the future of surveillance in this town, but don't think that it's not already this way in many major cities. Doesn't make it 100 percent right but that's what it is.

You essentially can't walk down the street in many cities without being surveilled. This system just makes it real time.
I dint know about the gang stuff tbh. I just know that "bad guys" are sometimes just people seeking their own justice and I'm ok with that.

Not the career criminals breaking in houses & cars.

If I have to give it to a muhfucka, I want to get away.
 
I dint know about the gang stuff tbh. I just know that "bad guys" are sometimes just people seeking their own justice and I'm ok with that.

Not the career criminals breaking in houses & cars.

If I have to give it to a muhfucka, I want to get away.



This is the type shit I want to see ended in this city. Immediate response might have found the vehicles involved.

Lady got shot just sitting in her car. Can you imagine being out and about and 200 rounds are let off all around you?

Well maybe you can, I know you are more familiar with guns that I, but I don't want to live like that (not taking a shot at you).

My neighbors had a couple young kids and moved out due to this...it went down about a block away from us.
 
As a privacy advocate this is terrifying but as someone that is in Atlanta watching shit spiral out of control I'm for it.

 
We have a gang problem that is being funded and marketed by the rap industry.

That Uvalde shit has sped up a lot of this rapid response and real time surveillance acceptance by the public. Authorities are eating it up.

No school district or cop department wants to be the next to be copping pleas and explaining what went wrong...and living in the fear/looking over their shoulder daily that they place in everyone else.
 
That shit was wild yesterday from work they locked down the building had po po posted even though it was about a mile and half down the rd from us. Sad those folk lost their life and that she threw hers away for them.
 
As long as it saves lives, lowers crime and ensures the real bad guys get caught I'm 100% for it, the presumed privacy in public places is some bullshit anyway, all this tech might as well use it for some good, plus hard for a cop to lie when the proof is on video so them cameras cut both ways.
Hard for them to lie but they will and the police department will back up and protect their lies. It was stated that every police chief will at some time have to do some federal training. When they come back they will come back brainwashed and they will pass this brainwashing on to the rest of the police department.
We act like whites got to be the leaders of civilation because they are concerned. They are devils and so far this is satan's world until we take it back.
 
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