Author: tensor_carpark

Camera surveillance can be added to barrier network

Cemetery thefts Calls have come for CCTV and other measures to make a graveyard more secure after police are stressing they are not linking the two thefts from the Eastfield Cemetery in Peterborough. Emma Smith (25) and her family, who visit the Cambridgeshire cemetery nearly every day, had been left heartbroken when they found that two angels had been taken from the grave of her brother.


Our car park surveillance engineers are all security vetted

council surveillance operationsPressure group Big Brother Watch is calling for snooping powers designed to combat terrorism to be removed from councils. The controversial methods have been used by councils to catch rogue traders and people suspected of misusing disabled parking permits. For example, Fareham Borough Council has conducted 76 secret surveillance operations since 2008, spying on suspected cases of tipping trade waste, among others.


Skirts prevent pedestrians from walking underneath automatic barriers

fake parking ticket Vehicle owners are being hoodwinked by a fake parking ticket scam that demands payment, and includes a £1-per-minute ‘phone information line’ for disputes. The tickets, which look almost identical to a genuine item, are being stuck onto legally parked cars. They demand £68, or £34 if the ‘fine’ is paid within 14 days. Tickets have been found in Cheshire and Staffordshire, issued by a company called Parked Vehicles Division Limited.


Half height turnstiles a secure access control method

half-a-million pounds behind toilet A man stopped on a routine search by police was later found to have half-a-million pounds stuffed into a home-made void behind a toilet. When he was asked by officers what items he had in the car, Peter Wells admitted he had £80,000 in a holdall, which he said was for buying trousers. When he could not say where the large number of notes had come from, Wells was arrested on suspicion of money laundering.


Automatic bollards completely stop the majority of vehicles

Hampshire police Chief ConstableServices across the board are facing swingeing government cuts, with Hampshire police bowing to the inevitable and getting rid of more than 1,000 jobs. Chief Constable Alex Marshall admitted he was trying to provide a service with his "hands tied behind his back." He said: "I know all our staff join the constabulary to do the best job they can and that the changes ahead will be difficult for everyone.


Total security solution for sites via modular barrier network

Portsmouth warning signs crimeSigns warning people they were under police surveillance were described as something out of the novel ‘1984’. That is what Portsmouth city councillor Luke Stubbs evoked when he complained that the Beware, We Are Watching You sign was too close to the famous book which coined the phrase ‘Big Brother is watching you’. Police put up eight warning signs as a response to a series of criminal damage incidents in the south coast area.


Automatic barriers operate with smart card access control

drivers in a nine-day traffic jamThe bank holiday rush for the resorts is looming, but any snarl-ups will be hard-pressed to beat Chinese drivers sitting it out in a nine-day traffic jam. Vehicles are going nowhere in Beijing due to roadworks, which caused the logjam beginning in mid-August.


Toilet turnstiles perfect for high volumes of traffic

prosecute toilet and washing facilitiesA boss of a Bridlington building firm was fined for not including for workers adequate toilet and washing facilities on site. The Health and Safety Executive prosecuted Bryan Ellis Brown, a partner in Bryan Brown & Son, of Flamborough.


Static bollards deter parking on private land

ban wheel clamping on private landThe British Parking Association has reacted to the Government’s plans to ban wheel clamping on private land. The BPA statement contained these objections: "Drivers should be encouraged to comply with the conditions of private car park use. Everyone recognises landowners’ rights to control their land. If drivers trespass, there must be repercussions.


Steel fencing helps reduce crime and vandalism

the De Beers jewellery raid Detectives are still counting the insurance cost of a lightning smash and grab heist in which jewels worth several million pounds were stolen in London. A gang broke into a low-grade security entrance to access the De Beers store inside the Royal Exchange shopping area. The arcade, based around a champagne and seafood bar, is lined by jewellers and luxury goods stores which often leave displays fully stocked to encourage window shopping.