“We’re able to track license plates, we’re able to track video, from camera to camera,” an SPD commander said.
SEATTLE — Should the city of Seattle allow police to put surveillance cameras in high-crime neighborhoods? It was a question posed to a committee of city council members this week.
On Tuesday, the committee members each voted yes to pass the bill along to the Oct. 8 regular council meeting. This gets the Seattle Police Department one step closer to introducing a new pilot program where they would be able to install live surveillance video cameras in Seattle neighborhoods that they say have the most violent crime.
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