Toledo Bar Shootout Caught on Tape

October 14th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Video Surveillance

TOLEDO, Ohio – A hectic shootout between several patrons at the Route 66 Bar and Grill on Westwood Avenue near Nebraska Avenue in Toledo was captured on surveillance tape.

The shootout unfolded a few minutes before midnight late Thursday.

The surveillance video, released by Toledo police detectives Friday, shows the Route 66 bar packed with patrons. A few seconds into the video, some people are shown exchanging words with other patrons, yelling and screaming.

A few seconds later, bar patrons scatter in all directions as the words turned into a physical fight. Some of the patrons scramble for doors. One person is seen rolling over the pool table toward the doorway.

About a minute later, one patron is seen hiding behind the pool table with a pistol in his hand.

An unidentified man walks into the screen from a doorway on the left side of the bar, also with a pistol in his hand. A few beats later, shots ring out. The people that remained in the bar duck and drop to the floor.

Upwards of 20 shots were fire in the exchange. Luckily, nobody was hurt in the barrage of fire.

In another view from the surveillance video, many patrons flee out of the front entrance of the Route 66 bar in a mass exodus. After a few seconds of momentary calm, two people are shown pulling out handguns. Both fire into the bar.

The alleged suspects face felonious assault charges or possibly attempted murder charges once caught, Toledo police detectives said.

Source: http://www.foxtoledo.com/

Convenience Store Robbed; Reward Offered

July 12th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Video Surveillance

The following robbery was caught on camera by surveillance equipment installed by Habitec Security.

JOHNSTOWN, Ohio — Licking County Crime Stoppers announced Monday that it is offering a reward of up to $1,000 in hopes of finding two robbers.

RobberyAn armed robbery took place on June 18 at about 7:12 p.m. at the Fredonia Mall, located at 6754 North State Rd. Police said that two men in their late teens or early 20s had handguns and robbed the convenience store.

Surveillance photos taken inside the store showed that both men had thin builds and were wearing red bandannas on their faces. They also wore sunglasses, latex gloves and baggy blue jeans.

One of the men is between 6 feet 1 inch to 6 feet 4 inches tall and was wearing a red baseball cap and a dark long-sleeve shirt. The second man is between 5 feet 8 inches to 5 feet 9 inches tall and was wearing a black baseball cap and a light long-sleeve shirt.

Police said that both men ran away toward nearby Ellas Park where their vehicle may have been parked. The vehicle that they might have drove off in was a dark gray or faded blue smaller sport-utility vehicle made in the early 1990s.

Source: http://www.wbns10tv.com/

Video Tool Zooms in on Criminals

July 10th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Industry News, Video Surveillance

You must have seen how cops in TV programmes zoom in on a security camera video to read a number plate or capture the face of a hold-up artist. But in real life, enhancing this low-quality video to focus in on important clues hasn’t been an easy task. Until now.

Leonid Yaroslavsky of Tel Aviv University (TAU) and colleagues have developed a new video “perfection tool” to help investigators enhance raw video images and identify suspects. Commissioned by a defence-related company to improve what the naked eye cannot see, the tool can be used with live video or with recordings, in colour or black-and-white.

“This enhancement of resolution can be a critical factor in locating terrorists or identifying criminal suspects,” said Yaroslavsky, a professor.

The new invention enhances the resolution of raw video images from security cameras, military binoculars, and standard personal-use video cameras, improving the quality in which the images were originally recorded or transmitted. This can mean the difference between seeing trees blowing in the wind and finding a terrorist hiding in those trees. A major challenge in video analysis is that images of objects become distorted over long distances due to variations in the air that can affect our sight and the “sight” of a camera.

Using specially designed algorithms, the team built a software application that lets cameras and video analysis equipment stabilise images, allowing objects that are really moving to be distinguished from chaotic atmospheric changes. The technology will increase the odds of identifying suspects in court, said Yaroslavsky, but its other applications are equally significant, said a TAU release. Instead of sending large video files over the Internet, smaller and lower-resolution files could be sent, which can be enhanced at their destination points. This could save bandwidth and time. His findings were published in Optical Letters and the Journal of Real Time Image Processing. Published by HT Syndication with permission from Indo-Asian News Service.

Source: http://www.securityinfowatch.com/Executives/1312096

New Surveillance Trend: City Watch

July 9th, 2009 | 4 Comments | Posted in Industry News, Video Surveillance

By Daniel Gelinas

Adoption of public surveillance has been slow to spread for a number of reasons. Chief among them is the “Big Brother” privacy argument. However, according to many, this aversion to widespread public video monitoring is changing, and that’s very good news in a slow economy for a struggling security industry. Not only does it mean more installations, but, in many cases, the municipalities don’t have anyone to watch the cameras, so they are contracting with private alarm firms to do the monitoring for them.

Communities like Atherton (where police are currently waging a campaign to tie in private, residential CCTV and IP-video systems to the municipal system) and El Cerrito, Calif., Birmingham, Ala., and St. Louis, to name a few, have large-scale municipal surveillance programs in place and indicate the genesis of a trend.

Ojo Technology security solution advisor Bob Kusche likens the increasing acceptance and quickening spread of surveillance at the municipality level to the explosion of Web commerce. “It is akin to when big business first encountered the Internet,” Kusche said. “Everyone was scratching their heads wondering how to use the technology. Security is only now starting to do the same thing with IP-enabled cameras, sensors, and other related hardware.” Kusche also points to public opinion as proof that acceptance will continue to increase.

“Polls show a 98 percent approval rating by the public for cameras placed in public areas,” Kusche said. “Ojo Technology presented a ‘Video 911’ presentation to 27 police departments last August in conjunction with the Atherton Police Department. That’s a lot of interest.”

According to California Alarm Association past president Jon Sargent, who is with ADT Industry Relations-West, quicker adoption of video surveillance solutions at the municipality level is a natural extension of a shift in priorities. Safety and security are now of paramount importance in reaction to heightened crime and more desperate criminals. “I have actually heard more people comment at city council meetings that they want more cameras in certain areas. Crime, and in particular violent crime, has gotten to the point where people are now willing to allow just about any tools available to fight crime,” Sargent said. “People just don’t care like they used to about having cameras around and I think most have accepted that out in public areas there is no expectation of privacy.”

Further, communities are looking to the security industry to help fight that crime and monitor those cameras.

In early 2008, the Office of the Mayor in Birmingham, Ala., hired systems integrator ION Interactive Video Technologies, an IP-based video and security solutions provider, to install surveillance cameras in various outdoor locations across the city. According to Richard Cruit, vice president of ION, the city also asked ION to remotely monitor all of the installed cameras from the company’s own control center, a rare opportunity for a private monitoring company. “Municipalities normally set up their own monitoring stations within the police station,” Cruit said. “We’ve got a very unusual arrangement with the city of Birmingham. They basically thought we could do it better.”

Cruit explained that while the situation with ION in Birmingham is not industry standard, more opportunities are opening up, and the current expectation of public surveillance to promote safety is spreading rapidly into the private sector. “This is good for the industry. No doubt about that. With the municipal contracts come more commercial contracts. Because as the municipalities bring these systems online, there’s more awareness of it,” Cruit said. “Then the private sector takes a look at it and says, ‘Well golly, if they can do it, we can do it. We’ve got an apartment complex or a large facility and we want to make sure it’s surveilled.’ It’s a natural progression.”

Carey Boethel, vice president, business unit head for security solutions U.S., Siemens Building Technologies, sees increased opportunity given the new trend toward security-critical infrastructure, much of it controlled by local governments. “Today we’re able to capitalize on a couple of different trends in the marketplace that we see occurring, including the continued spending in the critical infrastructure space. We can aggregate all these technologies, and we’re doing that from our command centers. We’re monitoring critical infrastructure on behalf of municipalities,” Boethel said. “We’re also doing managed services from there, hosting access and video. The guard-tour scenario is something that we do every day … RMR is a by-product of that.”

Mike Hackett, CEO and president of St. Louis-based Hackett Security says the need for vigilance, especially in urban centers where many cities are revitalizing, is paramount. A rebuilt downtown does no good if people don’t feel safe, Hackett points out. “In most cities you have most of the growth in the ring of the donut. The center is so built out that they go farther and farther out, but now we’re rebuilding on the inside of the donut,” Hackett said. “So we put cameras up in coordination with local business owners and when the cameras start to see a group of people … [the business association will] just make sure that they’ve taken the assets of the guard force and deployed them around where the people are, while we alert the police. And when you’ve got police and lots of people watching what’s going on, if they’re up to something unscrupulous, they’re going somewhere else.”

Sargent agrees that citizens are continuing to realize the way to keep honest people honest and dishonest people away is to openly monitor their public activities. “There are still some people who are paranoid of ‘Big Brother,’ but the tide has turned,” Sargent said. “People who do not do illegal things have nothing to fear and look forward to a safer community. People who do illegal things should be fearful, and will move on to other areas.”

A recent case study released by ION identifies the challenges of securing America’s downtowns. Paramount, according to the release, is to efficiently and cost-effectively increase safety and security with limited security personnel in sprawling downtown areas. ION’s solution includes the use of VideoIQ, analytics-enabled video surveillance cameras throughout the downtown core, which allows for prompt detection and notification of suspicious behavior, enabling guards to evaluate the situation and dispatch police immediately. “The public now accepts, and in some instances expects this. The municipality views it as the force multiplier. They can do more with fewer feet on the street,” Cruit said. “It’s already starting to drill down into the residential market.”

Security Industry Alarm Coalition director Ron Walters feels a time is coming where the industry and municipalities will work more and more closely together. “I believe that the future will be the industry uploading video to the 911 folks,” Walters said, noting APCO and the CSAA had recently worked together to pass a standard to allow direct digital communication of dispatch info between the security industry and police.

While these municipal installations have been largely closed to RMR opportunities, cities and towns will increasingly represent long-term customers who expect a partnership with private security companies. The successes, or not, of these early relationships will likely shape the future market.

Source: http://www.securitysystemsnews.com/?p=article&id=ss200907tx84Q1

HDCCTV Alliance formed

July 2nd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Industry News, Video Surveillance

By L. Samuel Pfeifle

SYDNEY, Australia–The term alone may be a new one for video surveillance installers, allowed Todd Rockoff, but the concepts and technology ought to be very familiar. Thus, the challenges for the HDCCTV Alliance executive chairman are twofold: First, get people to understand what HDCCTV is; second, get people to see why it’s better than what they’re already installing.

The working definition of HDCCTV: “A video surveillance system wherein broadcast-industry-compliant, high-definition video [720p is roughly one megapixel, and 1080p is roughly two megapixels] signals are transmitted digitally over conventional CCTV media, without packetization and without a perceivable compression latency.”

But Rockoff said it more succinctly: “The guy can plug in the coax cable and, voila, the HD image comes up.”

The charter members of the HDCCTV Alliance, which has as its goals both the creation of a global standard for HDCCTV transmission and proselytization through display of the technology, comprise much of a HDCCTV solution. Gennum makes the HD-SDI chips (the standard in broadcast HD cameras) that transmit the video by serializing it for long-range coax cable transmission and then deserializing the signal for display. Stretch makes the chips that take that signal and both compress it for storage on the DVR and pre-process it for live monitor display. Ovii will make the actual cameras and EverFocus will make the DVRs.

For Rockoff and Stretch head of sales and marketing Bob Beachler, the end display is the real selling point. Because the system involves no compression or packetizing of the video, what end users see on their commercial HD monitors is just like what they see on their televisions at home. At ISC West, Stretch showed a proof of the technology that allowed for 720p display at 60 frames per second.

“All the major customers said, ‘That looks awesome. How does it work and how do I get it?’” Beachler said.

This display, the ease with which most legacy installers will be able to upgrade current coax-based systems to HD, the relatively known quality that is the DVR for storage, and the lower price of analog cameras leads Rockoff to claim, “the megapixel IP camera is fundamentally inferior with respect to every business decision-making criteria: reliability, convenience, price and performance.”

Beachler is not as ready to throw IP cameras under the bus: “Is it fundamentally inferior? No. It’s just fundamentally different. There are capabilities that IP cameras can give you that analog cameras can’t. But you won’t have the latency issues and you won’t need the computing power because you’re just moving raw video around with HDCCTV.” He also notes that only a percentage of camera installations have live viewing at all. “For people compressing and storing for later viewing, that’s an IP network camera kind of place.”

Beachler feels the best market for HDCCTV will be for upgrading the current coax-based installations that would like to have HD capabilities.

Fredrik Nilsson, general manager, Americas, for Axis Communications, largely thought of as the company that brought IP cameras to security, said the HDCCTV Alliance only reinforces “how successful the HD concept has become in the camera market – people are really getting the concept of resolution. Putting myself in the shoes of an analog manufacturer, I see you would have nothing to compete with that so HDCCTV makes sense. All of a sudden they say, ‘Let’s try to do the same thing,’ because it’s technically possible.”

While it’s been technically possible for some time, it’s only really been financially realistic in the last year or so, said Beachler, because the HD-SDI chips were previously nearly $100 a piece. Now that Gennum can more reasonably manufacture them, they’ve become appropriate for many-camera installations.

As of June 16, the HDCCTV Alliance has its .9 version of the interoperability specification available to members (who must pay a fee based on level of participation), and the alliance plans to have a more robust specification, which will include things like controlling PTZ cameras, sending sound, and possibly sending power “up cable,” much like PoE, ready by September 1.

Nilsson called HDCCTV “an interesting concept, but it will be a huge investment to get it off the ground.” He also said it will require buy in from the major camera companies, like Panasonic, Sony, Bosch, and others. Beachler said he’s already been in conversations with those kinds of companies, and when it comes to DVRs, “I’ve got customers just waiting for me to make the cards.” He predicted a variety of HD DVRs and cameras by January of 2010. “That’s the great thing about this,” he said. “The roll out to adoption will be really quick.”

Source: http://www.securitysystemsnews.com/?p=article&id=ss200907QkjoVd

Barnhart Electric Merges with Habitec

May 15th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Press Releases

MergerWe are excited to announce that Habitec Security of Toledo, OH has acquired Zanesville’s Barnhart Electric. Barnhart Electric is a company similar to Habitec Security in that they both handle all security needs for commercial and residential customers. Habitec is in the process of transferring all monitored alarm systems to their own command center located in Toledo, OH.

Barnhart Electric will assume the name Habitec Security. The current customers will receive the best in security protection as has been the tradition of Habitec Security since 1972. Habitec Security has had a presence in the Columbus area for 25 years and hopes that this acquisition will strengthen their position there.

Habitec Secures Moon Rock

November 2nd, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Press Releases

Habitec Security has been awarded a contract to secure a rock from the Moon. On Nov, 12 2007 Gene Kranz, a former NASA flight director, will return to his alma mater Central Catholic High School with a rock from the Moon. Mr. Kranz was born and raised in Toledo, Ohio before he became well known for his role in saving the crew of Apollo 13. Mr. Kranz is donating the Moon rock to Central Catholic which will be on display at the Kranz Exploration Learning Center.

In order to display the Moon rock to the public Central Catholic has to follow strict security guidelines required by NASA. Habitec has been chosen as the security company to design a system that will assure NASA the Moon rock will be secure. Habitec will be installing a sophisticated digital video system which among other features will have the capability of seeing in total darkness. Along with monitored 360 degree motion detectors, NASA can be assured that the Moon rock is in good hands with Habitec.

Habitec Lights The Night

October 6th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Community, Press Releases

Habitec employees, friends and families participated in the annual Light The Night Walk demonstrating their support for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. Participants carried illuminated red and white balloons to light up downtown Toledo and celebrate and commemorate lives touched by blood cancers.

The Habitec Heroes team walked in remembrance of the late Jim Smythe, founder of Habitec Security. Mr. Smythe lost his courageous battle with leukemia in 2006 and will always be remembered for his love of reaching out to help people in the community. This philosophy of helping others has continued and the Habitec Team has brought a generous contribution to this organization.

If you are interested in joining us in the Light The Night Walk, please contact us.

Habitec Toledo Open Pro Am

September 24th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Community, Press Releases

Habitec OpenOn September 23, Habitec Security hosted the second annual Jim Smythe Memorial Toledo Open Pro-Am.  Jim Smythe, the founder of Habitec, fought his battle with leukemia with courage and grace but lost his fight on June 17, 2006.  After being diagnosed with Leukemia, Jim received blood products weekly.

To raise awareness for the never-ending need of blood, the Toledo Open planning committee designated that the Red Cross Blood Services would be the beneficiaries. The funds will be used to purchase a new blood mobile for the Toledo community.

The Jim Smythe Memorial Pro-Am preceded the Habitec Security Toledo Open, a PGA sanctioned event.  Jim Smythe was instrumental in reviving the Toledo Open in 2001. Two of the winners in the past five years are currently on the PGA Tour, including the 2003 winner John Mills.

This year’s event featured 130 PGA Pro’s playing for a purse of $25,000. The 2007 winner of the Habitec Toledo Open was Anthony Zummo of Mayfield Heights, OH. Mr. Zummo shot 9 under for the 36 hole tournament.

Habitec Holds 2nd Annual Blood Drive

August 15th, 2007 | 1 Comment | Posted in Community, Press Releases

Red CrossHabitec Security held their second annual blood drive on August 13, 2007. The blood mobile came to Habitec’s corporate office located at 2926 S. Republic Blvd. in Toledo, OH, and Habitec employees and family lined up to donate blood to the American Red Cross.

Habitec employees gave enough blood to save up to 30 lives. Habitec would like to thank everyone who participated in this important annual event, and is looking forward to an even more successful campaign next year.