Police and communities have a new weapon in the fight against crime. Across America, Real Time Crime Centers use surveillance cameras, tracking system…
In New York City, after a 15-year-old boy's murder, surveillance cameras capture not only the attack but the killers. In Baltimore, when someone guns down Timothy Moriconi on the street, police turn to a neighbor's surveillance system to crack the case.
A shooting in Mississippi leaves a man fighting for his life. Police and a Real Time Crime Center must use gunshot detection technology to track the shooter before he strikes again. In South Carolina, RTCC cameras capture a deadly bar brawl.
In NYC, surveillance cameras help track down a trio of bandits after a daring heist of a Pay-o-Matic in Queens. And in Colorado, a makeshift Real Time Crime Center helps solve the murder of 27-year-old Andrew Jenicek who was killed outside a restaurant.
Surveillance cameras in Toledo, Ohio, capture a drive-by shooting that rips a family apart when a 3-year-old boy dies. And in Jonesville, Louisiana, a nightclub shooting of a police officer’s son leads to a manhunt across state lines.
In Dallas, gunshots kill a man on the Fourth of July, and Detectives turn to a Real Time Crime Center to find the truth. When the smoke clears from a raging fire in Washington, police discover that arson turns to murder -- and it’s all caught on tape.
When a shooting spree turns deadly in Natchez, Mississippi, detectives turn to city-run cameras to identify suspects. And in Utah, a missing person’s case becomes a murder investigation, and police rely on a Real Time Crime Center to find the killer.