Showing posts with label surveillance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label surveillance. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

FBI Releases Video with Tips for Surveillance



The TV news anchor soberly announced the day’s top story: another city transit bus had been bombed, and a domestic terror group was claiming responsibility. The report went on to say that witnesses saw a man get off the bus just before it blew up, and that the FBI was investigating.


The scene described above—realistic as it may sound—is part of a fictional new video.But Caught on Camera is not a product of Hollywood. While it does have high production values, special effects, and narration by Annie Wersching, co-star of the TV show 24, the video was created by our Operational Technology Division to show business owners how their security cameras can aid law enforcement investigations and maybe even help solve a terrorist attack.


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Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Surveillance All Part of a Day's Work for PI

Under-cover surveillance operations, covert filming and tailing cars – it all sounds like something from the movies.

But it’s all part of a day’s work for private investigator Richard Musoni, who recently set up his own firm in Heston to discreetly monitor and gather evidence for his growing number of clients.

Mr Musoni, 38, of Hounslow Road, Feltham, employs two other agents covering a large area of west London, including Hounslow and Richmond.

Read more here.


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Monday, July 21, 2008

Private Eye in Exorcism Case Recorded Over 700 Hours of Surveillance Footage

THE man who tailed Madam Amutha Valli Krishnan for more than four months took the stand yesterday and said that, on most days, she looked normal.

Madam Valli is claiming in a lawsuit that she was traumatised by an alleged exorcism at Novena Church in 2004. Among other things, she says she is fearful of going out and being alone.

But private investigator Gilbert Mathews De Silva and his team, who followed her for more than four months last year, got footage of her doing just that.

His firm, SecureGuard Security Services, was hired by lawyer Tito Isaac, who is representing a priest named in the lawsuit.

In all, the investigators got more than 700 hours of footage. It came from hand-held camcorders and closed-circuit television cameras mounted opposite her Ang Mo Kio flat.

Excerpts of the footage were shown in court to Madam Valli's two psychiatrists as lawyers for the defendants tried to prove that she was exaggerating her condition.




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