CTS America Increases Presence in Florida

CTS America Increases Presence in Florida

Published November 16th, 2011

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

Pensacola, FL –CTS America was awarded a contract from an RFP with the Putnam County Sheriffs’ Office to implement our Computer Aided Dispatch, Records Management, Mobile Field Based Reporting, and Jail Management System.

In May 2012, Putnam County Emergency Services added CTS America’s mobile software enabling both agencies to work cooperatively in the use of the software for public safety purposes.

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged in system development, implementation, and support services for a fully integrated suite of public safety products including Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Records Management System (RMS), Mobile Computing with Field Based Reporting, and Jail Management System (JMS).

CTS Provides latest in E-Citations to Palm Beach / FHP

Icon for SmartCOP's Field Based Reporting.
Icon for SmartCOP's Field Based Reporting.

CTS Provides latest in E-Citations to Palm Beach / FHP

Published October 3rd, 2011

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

CLERK & COMPTROLLER, FLORIDA HIGHWAY PATROL PARTNER FOR MORE EFFICIENT PROCESSING OF TRAFFIC TICKETS

New technology enables electronic transmission of ticket images

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. (October 3, 2011) – Clerk Sharon Bock announced today that her office will be the first Clerk’s office in Florida to accept electronic images of traffic tickets from the Florida Highway Patrol, saving costly trips to the courthouse to deliver paper tickets.

The new system, which launches in October, will allow citations to get into the Clerk’s system more quickly, since images of citations will be delivered electronically. People will be able to pay fines, sign up for traffic school, or otherwise settle their case faster without waiting on a paper ticket to arrive at the Clerk’s office.

“No one likes getting a ticket, but we’re always looking for ways to improve our services,” said Clerk Sharon Bock. “Helping citizens save time by navigating government more efficiently is our goal. That’s why this partnership with the Florida Highway Patrol is so important.”

Tickets for violations such as speeding or driving without a seatbelt will be transmitted electronically to the Clerk’s office at the end of each day, and available for review the next business day. Citations for offenses such as driving 30 mph over the speed limit, or that involve serious injuries or fatalities, and require a court appearance will still require the delivery of a paper ticket to the Clerk’s office.

Electronic transmittal of tickets also will help boost efficiency in the Clerk’s busy County Criminal division, which processed 344,000 tickets last year, 25 percent of which were from FHP.

People will still receive a paper ticket from the Highway Patrol trooper, but the Clerk’s office will not have to wait for the paper copy to open a new case.

Florida Highway Patrol is the first agency that has agreed to transmit ticket images electronically. Clerk Bock said she hopes to expand the program to include other local law enforcement agencies as well.

There are several options for paying traffic tickets, including paying at any of our courthouse locations, at our Midwestern Communities Service Center in Royal Palm Beach, by mail, online or at Check Cashing Store locations throughout South Florida. Information about entering a not guilty plea, enrolling in traffic school and answers to frequently asked questions are available on our Traffic Violations page on www.mypalmbeachclerk.com.

MCT Version 8 with Two Factor Authentication Available for Release

Image of an officer in his vehicle, typing on his mobile computer terminal.
Image of an officer in his vehicle, typing on his mobile computer terminal.

MCT Version 8 with Two Factor Authentication Available for Release

Published September 16th, 2011

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

Pensacola, Florida – CTS America is pleased to announce the release of their SmartMOBILE Mobile Computer Terminal (MCT), Version 8 product.
MCT version 8 includes functionality for client law enforcement agencies to provide access to CJIS-protected resources via in-car terminals. CJIS security policy (CJIS Security Policy December 2008 version 4.5) requires that certain safeguards be in place to prevent unauthorized access.
MCT version 8 meets the requirements for safeguarding access to the CJIS-protected resources by using two-factor authentication, 128-bit encryption, and providing accountability for requests to access CJIS-protected resources.

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged in system development, implementation, and support services for a fully integrated suite of public safety products including Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Records Management System (RMS), Mobile Computing with Field Based Reporting, and Jail Management System (JMS).

Sheriff Mark Hunter Focuses on Technology Transition

Columbia County Focuses on New Technology

Published June 30th, 2011

New Technology Advancing Sheriff's Office

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

The North Florida Herald Posted: Thursday, June 30, 2011
Continuing budget cuts are bringing law enforcement changes to Columbia County, including Fort White, and the Sheriff is focusing on technology to make the transition.
About 70 people gathered at the Fort White Community Center on Thursday, June 23 for a multimedia presentation by the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office that focused, in part, on the new technology the Sheriff’s is embracing.

The meeting seemed more like a family reunion than a “traveling road show” as Columba County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer Sgt. Ed Seifert liked to call it.
After a light dinner and heavy chatter, Sheriff Mark Hunter talked business. With fewer funds, Hunter said he made the logical move to revamp communications through a new technology, the SmartCOP computer software by CTS America, a systems development company.  According to the CTS America Website, the SmartCOP is a multi-agency system that streamlines the call taking and dispatch process by allowing for rapid data entry, setting call priorities and making resource recommendations.

The new technology, along with a 911 conversion call plan and new radios, cost about $2 million of grants from the county.
Still, the benefits outweigh the costs, according to Thursday’s presentation. Instead of 9-10 pages of handwritten reports that take days to process, Seifert said, SmartCOP sends an e-mail from the crime scene to the sergeant in a matter of minutes. “That means more efficiency and more road time,” Seifert said. This is crucial for the 135 paid deputies who patrol Columbia County, an area that encompasses nearly 70,000 residents over 797 square miles.  Hunter now had deputies serving multiple duties. For instance, a patrol deputy may also be a rescue diver and a member of the SWAT team. Even the police dogs are multipurpose with abilities to sniff narcotics, and trail and apprehend suspects.

Hunter is also promising a multipurpose district office in Fort White that would consolidate the tax collector’s, the county clerk’s and the sheriff’s office under one roof.
“If we don’t have the building by year-end, in December, I am committed to providing the manpower and the assets,” Hunter said.  Other technological changes include a crime map that Hunter plans to implement within the next six weeks.  He described the crime map much like a weather forecaster illustrates the weather. Crimes density will be displayed like thunderstorms or scattered showers, depending on where crimes occur and how often.  So not only law enforcement but also citizens will be able to see any patterns that arise when the “crime element moves around.” For the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office, the number one concern is victim crime, followed by drugs and community networking, Hunter said.

In tune with Hunter’s concern for victim crime are the statistics that show his agency’s crime solve rate at 33.5 percent- a figure that he touted as being about 10 percent higher than the state crime solve rates.  “We’re just gonna keep on working and try to make it gooder and gooder,” Hunter said.

Hillsborough County Sheriffs’ Office Implements CTS America’s Field Based Reporting Software

Hillsborough County Sheriffs’ Office Implements CTS America’s Field Based Reporting Software

Published February 16th, 2011

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

Pensacola, FL – Hillsborough County Sheriffs’ Office purchased CTS America’s Field Based Reporting software for the use of Crash Reports and error free submissions. They previously used a free crash reporting software product but was not satisfied with the number of errors returned when submitting to the State. This implementation was completed in April 2011.

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged in system development, implementation, and support services for a fully integrated suite of public safety products including Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Records Management System (RMS), Mobile Computing with Field Based Reporting, and Jail Management System (JMS).

Lafayette County Sheriffs’ Office Implements CTS Software

Close up image of the badge on the chest of an officer with a blurred-out background used on the Partners page.
Close up image of the badge on the chest of an officer with a blurred-out background used on the Partners page.

Lafayette County Sheriffs’ Office Implements CTS Software

Published November 16th, 2010

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

Pensacola, FL – CTS America is pleased to welcome the addition of Lafayette County Sheriffs’ Office Florida.
Lafayette County has implemented the CTS Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Records Management System (RMS), and Jail Management System (JMS) software and Mobile Computer Terminal (MCT)

About CTS America – CTS America (SmartCOP, Inc.), a privately-held Florida corporation, is engaged in system development, implementation, and support services for a fully integrated suite of public safety products including Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD), Records Management System (RMS), Mobile Computing with Field Based Reporting, and Jail Management System (JMS).

Technology Lets Georgia Troopers Stay on the Highway

Technology Lets Georgia Troopers Stay on the Highway

Published June 3rd, 2009

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

The following story, provided by WALB10, shows CTS’ technology in action.

Tifton, GA (WALB) – The Georgia State Patrol is about to start using new technology that will save time and money and keep troopers safer.

By this summer, most Troopers will have computer systems in their cars that will allow them to do most of their reports and work from the road.

The Georgia State Patrol wants their troopers to spend most of their time on the road not back at their headquarters filling out reports. So the state is installing Computer Aided Dispatch systems in their offices, and Mobile Computer Terminals in their cars to help Troopers be more efficient.

Trooper First Class Melvin Simmons has the mounting equipment ready in his car when the Georgia State Patrol’s Mobile Computer terminals are installed in July. The computers will make traffic stops safer, because he will be able to check tag information himself, rather than radioing for it.

“Right now we’re actually calling it in on the radio, at that time we are getting out. And we don’t know what we’re dealing with until they run the tag and call us and let us know. So it’s going to help out,” Simmons said.

The Computer Aided Dispatch to run this new communication service has been installed and is running in the Tifton Post. When the mobile computers are added to the Troopers cars this summer, they will be able to do their reports from the car, so they will spend more time on the road than at the Post. The computers will have GPS so they will know where every trooper is at all times, and provide instant maps.

“If he gets a wreck, the mapping system will plot a route for him to that wreck so he doesn’t have to figure out where is trying to get to. Same thing if we have a Trooper who needs assistance,” said Tifton Post Commander SFC Scott Woodell.

State officials think the computers will improve response time, and efficiency, estimating it will save 40,000 man hours each year. Troopers say they are excited that these new Georgia State Patrol computers will usher in a new age for their service.

“We’re moving away from some of those traditional ideas into the mainstream of the information age,” Woodell said.

“It’s just an all around good idea,” Simmons said.

Supervisors say the Troopers may also help cut down on speeding as they fill out reports. They’ll be parked in visible spots along highways, and we all know drivers usually hit the brakes when they see a trooper’s car.

The system will make the state patrol greener by cutting down on the amount of paper they use.

Dublin State Patrol gets new Patrol Car Technology

Dublin State Patrol gets new Patrol Car Technology

Published June 3rd, 2009

At the time this was written, SmartCOP, Inc. was doing business as CTS America.

We are happy to share the following story, provided by 13WMAZ, which shows CTS America technology in action.

Georgia State Patrol has started the switch to a new computer-based dispatch system designed to save money and help troopers with routine traffic stops. Troop F, which is based in Dublin and covers twenty counties in Central Georgia, is training its troopers this week to use the system.

Trooper First Class Jonathan Foskey says the new system includes a laptop for each patrol car, giving troopers instant access to tag numbers, registrations, and records without having to radio in to a dispatch center.

“It’s alleviated me having to put pen to paper,” Foskey says. “I’ve been able to issue citations with it. Warnings with it. Any type of crash reports with it.”

While Foskey says the new computers make his job a little easier, he says what is more important to him is peace of mind. He says the computers are equipped with a GPS, which shows the locations of every trooper at all times.

“If I call for help, and they may not know exactly where I am, they can look at the screen and know exactly how to get to me,” Foskey says.

He says troopers are not the only ones who will benefit from this technology. Drivers can look forward to shorter stop times, reduced wait times, and improved traffic advisories.

Dan Brown, with the State Department of Public Safety, says he expects eight-hundred thirty new laptops to be in use statewide by next fall. He says this should cut down on forty-thousand man hours per year.

“We’re not spending time driving to and from the post. We’re not spending time at the post, ” Brown says. “We’re actually saving those dollars and putting them back to work in what we do, and that’s saving lives.”

Brown says the system has been in the works for two year, and the project will be paid for with state funds as well as federal Homeland Security funds.