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vic lee has the story. >> reporter: according to fbi data, about 80% of property crimes go unsolved. the maker of this camera wants to change that by getting entire neighborhoods to install these license plate readers. many police departments have been using cameras that read license natures on busy streets mostly near freeway entry and exit points. but this is a solar powered license plate reading camera that is installed in neighborhoods. camera maker flock contracts with homeowners associations and other neighborhood groups. they can capture license plates of suspicion cars at the time a crime is committed. they can be installed on trees, lamp posts or even ground level. if you know when the crime 00 occurred, you can pull down the license plate images and create a pdf and send to the police. >> reporter: the company says homeowner groups are interested. police captain doug davis says it adds another dimension to home security cameras. >> and so we're capturing that piece of evidence which can prove valuable. >> reporter: as always, some are concerned about the privacy issue. >> i
vic lee has the story. >> reporter: according to fbi data, about 80% of property crimes go unsolved. the maker of this camera wants to change that by getting entire neighborhoods to install these license plate readers. many police departments have been using cameras that read license natures on busy streets mostly near freeway entry and exit points. but this is a solar powered license plate reading camera that is installed in neighborhoods. camera maker flock contracts with homeowners...
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Sep 6, 2017
09/17
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KOFY
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vic lee. >> reporter: it's a solar power license plate reading camera installed in neighborhoods. these images courtesy of the company. their cameras can capture license plates of suspicious cars that time a crime is committed. something common home security cameras may miss. >> this goes beyond your traditional nonviolent crime but it allows neighborhoods to look at things like spieding or loitering and other types of activities like that. >> reporter: the cameras can be installed on trees, lamp posts or evenn ground level. if you know when the crime occurred you can pull down the license plate images from a web interface. >> you can create a really nice pdf to the police when you file your police report. >> home owner groups are interested. police captain says it adds another dimension. >> it's also a license plate reader which can prove valuable down the road. >> reporter: as always some are concerned about the prive issue. >> in general i'm leaning against more big brother. >> i actually think it would be good thing. it actual would make me feel safer. >> i don't see it as a p
vic lee. >> reporter: it's a solar power license plate reading camera installed in neighborhoods. these images courtesy of the company. their cameras can capture license plates of suspicious cars that time a crime is committed. something common home security cameras may miss. >> this goes beyond your traditional nonviolent crime but it allows neighborhoods to look at things like spieding or loitering and other types of activities like that. >> reporter: the cameras can be...
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Sep 7, 2017
09/17
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KOFY
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vic lee is live at city hall with that story. vic? >> reporter: well, those concerns coming from the supervisor who sits on a fact finding committee of the supervisors, which is holding a hearing on the city's response. that hearing, two weeks from now here at city hall. everyone knew it. it was going to be hot. really hot. the weather service warned that on friday, it could break records and that the heat wave would continue saturday. >> the reality is san francisco was caught flat footed. the emergency operations center was not activated until friday night, long after we had reached unprecedented temperatures. >> reporter: aaron peskin and other members of the committee want answers. among them, why information about the city's cooling centers didn't go out to the public until friday night. 911 dispatchers received more than 800 calls each of the two days. on an average day, they get about 200 calls. he says that overwhelmed the response of ambulances. >> my understanding is that we had response times ranging as high as over an hour
vic lee is live at city hall with that story. vic? >> reporter: well, those concerns coming from the supervisor who sits on a fact finding committee of the supervisors, which is holding a hearing on the city's response. that hearing, two weeks from now here at city hall. everyone knew it. it was going to be hot. really hot. the weather service warned that on friday, it could break records and that the heat wave would continue saturday. >> the reality is san francisco was caught flat...
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vic lee is live at city hall with that story. vic? >> reporter: well, those concerns coming from the supervisor who sits on a fact finding committee of the supervisors, which is holding a hearing on the city's response. that hearing, two weeks from now here at city hall. everyone knew it. it was going to be hot. really hot. the weather service warned that on friday, it could break records and that the heat wave would continue saturday. >> the reality is san francisco was caught flat footed. the emergency operations center was not activated until friday night, long after we had reached unprecedented temperatures. >> reporter: aaron peskin and other members of the committee want answers. among them, why information about the city's cooling centers didn't go out to the public until friday night. 911 dispatchers received more than 800 calls each of the two days. on an average day, they get about 200 calls. he says that overwhelmed the response of ambulances. >> my understanding is that we had response times ranging as high as over an hour
vic lee is live at city hall with that story. vic? >> reporter: well, those concerns coming from the supervisor who sits on a fact finding committee of the supervisors, which is holding a hearing on the city's response. that hearing, two weeks from now here at city hall. everyone knew it. it was going to be hot. really hot. the weather service warned that on friday, it could break records and that the heat wave would continue saturday. >> the reality is san francisco was caught flat...
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Sep 20, 2017
09/17
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abc 7 news reporter vic lee has more on what san francisco's supervisors intend to do about this epidemic and this case in particular. >> there's now even a twitter handle. sf car break-ins where victims can post their sad experiences online. on top of that last month a gun stolen from a san francisco police officer's car was used in a gangland murder days later and then on sunday a they have stole a glock handgun similar to this one from a sheriff's deputy parked car. >> if a police officer, if a sheriff cannot secure their car and their vehicle in san francisco, then nobody can. >> supervisor hillary ronin has good reason to be frustrated. >> car breakins have gone up over 128% in the mission district. >> supervisors ronin and norman today introduced legislation requiring all district ten police stations to create a special property crimes unit focusing on car break-ins. >> we've got to do something about it, and so far all of the strategies of the police department aren't working. >> the police department would not comment, but chief william scott said recently he started a new plan to
abc 7 news reporter vic lee has more on what san francisco's supervisors intend to do about this epidemic and this case in particular. >> there's now even a twitter handle. sf car break-ins where victims can post their sad experiences online. on top of that last month a gun stolen from a san francisco police officer's car was used in a gangland murder days later and then on sunday a they have stole a glock handgun similar to this one from a sheriff's deputy parked car. >> if a...
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Sep 24, 2017
09/17
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ALJAZ
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vic and lee there are closer to thirty than to forty and yes we did is just down to twenty percent so therefore this is the worst result in the history of the as we did in the federal republic of germany and the out of date it's yeah it's it is just not so they don't have a concept they are really the pure fund them in opposition to the established parties in this regard it's really maybe the return of populism to europe but everybody of course hope that this will not happen but i think you know kind of surprise way so we might be back into discussions which we thought of a year ago we had and the thing the thing now will be what sort of coalition can be built angela merkel's party appears to be the winning party in this election from this result all these exit polls rather who could she plausibly form a coalition government with that it could be a continuation of the grand coalition which is very very unlikely currently because the s.p. do so down there still is no motivation actually to continue in this very disastrous marriott's with one gunman america finally is on the point of yo
vic and lee there are closer to thirty than to forty and yes we did is just down to twenty percent so therefore this is the worst result in the history of the as we did in the federal republic of germany and the out of date it's yeah it's it is just not so they don't have a concept they are really the pure fund them in opposition to the established parties in this regard it's really maybe the return of populism to europe but everybody of course hope that this will not happen but i think you...