Public Security video monitoring assists in prisons in Acre

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The Acre State Department of Justice and Public Security (Sejusp), through the Integrated Command and Control Center (CICC), carries out video monitoring that assists in prisons throughout the state.

Public Security video monitoring assists in prisons in the state. Photo: Dhárcules Pinheiro/Sejusp

The technology used at the CICC has a collection of cameras that monitor the locations of Acre cities day and night, and with them it is possible to monitor and identify people in criminal acts, such as those monitored by the Electronic People Monitoring Unit (Umep), for through electronic ankle bracelets.

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Monitoring of electronic ankle bracelets. Photo: Dhárcules Pinheiro/Sejusp
Monitoring of electronic ankle bracelets. Photo: Dhárcules Pinheiro/Sejusp

The Secretary of State for Justice and Public Security, Colonel José Américo Gaia, highlights that this security system is a great support for the State’s police forces. “CICC’s video surveillance cameras, which also respond to emergency numbers, are a tool that supports the work of Security, speeding up the security forces’ action processes to better serve the population of Acre,” he states.

Secretary of Public Security, Colonel José Américo Gaia. Photo: Dhárcules Pinheiro/Sejusp
Secretary of Public Security, Colonel José Américo Gaia. Photo: Dhárcules Pinheiro/Sejusp

The CICC coordinator, Lieutenant Francisco das Chagas da Silva Fonseca, explains that the video monitoring system has helped the police’s performance on the streets. “CICC has helped many people, including the Public Security Service, represented by the police officer who is on duty on the streets, and the combination of these has given extraordinary results in relation to elucidating crimes, identifying those involved, where they are complying with the semi-open measure and other situations, such as traffic”.

CICC Coordinator, Lieutenant Francisco das Chagas da Silva Fonseca. Photo: Dhárcules Pinheiro/Sejusp
CICC Coordinator, Lieutenant Francisco das Chagas da Silva Fonseca. Photo: Dhárcules Pinheiro/Sejusp

The head of the Electronic Monitoring Prison Establishments Division, Carlos Vinícius D’anzicourt Batista, states that electronic ankle bracelets are a resource used for the entire semi-open system. “Electronic monitoring is very important in the semi-open regime, where the person who was complying with this regime would leave in the morning, stay on the street all day to work and return to sleep in a support house, and now they are being monitored 24 hours, without a break in the period of the day that was completely outside the State’s supervision.”

In addition to the ankle bracelets, public security can monitor the steps of those re-educated who enjoy the semi-open regime through cameras spread out on the streets, where they know the time they arrive home, the place they are and the clothes they are wearing, thus making the monitoring the conduct of the monitored so that they do not commit new crimes again or, if they commit new crimes, they can be located quickly.

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The article is in Portuguese

Brazil

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