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BDIC Unveils New Products/ Expands into Home Offender & Law Enforcement Monitoring Market

BDIC Unveils New Products/ Expands into Home Offender & Law Enforcement Monitoring Market.

articleLeet Inc.November 2, 20173/company/leet-inc/news/bdic-unveils-new-products-expands-into-home-offender-and-law-enforcement-monitoring-market
BDIC Unveils New Products/ Expands into Home Offender & Law Enforcement Monitoring Market

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[{"type":"text","content":"\n\n LOS ANGELES, Nov. 01, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- (OTCQB:BDIC) Blow & Drive Interlock Corp (BDIC) based in Los Angeles, California has just announced its newest products to hit the market in Early 2018. There was plenty of excitement during the unveiling and demonstration of BDIC’s Home Alcohol Monitoring Device. The Handheld device with a camera and GPS/WIFI & live streaming allows those in Judicial and Probation departments to monitor offenders who are required to stay sober from alcohol while on probation.\n Traditionally, courts use probation to offer a criminal offender conditional relief from a potential jail sentence. If the offender meets regularly with a probation officer and complies with court-mandated benchmarks of good behavior for a fixed period of time, they escape a harsher sentence the court would otherwise impose. Courts in some US states charge offenders fees to help defray the costs of running a probation service. This is called “offender-funded” probation. State & Local officials turn to criminal offender monitoring companies like BDIC because they are facing genuine financial hardship. With BDIC’s new home alcohol monitoring system, BDIC can offer courts, counties, and municipalities criminal offender monitoring services without asking for a single dime of public revenue. In return BDIC has the right to collect fees from the probationers it supervises. The second amazing new product BDIC unveiled today was its 4G LTE Live-Streaming Video Body Worn Camera for Law Enforcement. Most body cameras are their own standalone device. They can record police interactions from a 12-hour shift, typically, onto an internal storage device that an officer carries around on their uniform. At the end of a shift, they go back to headquarters to upload the data. There's one major disadvantage to this uploading setup. If some significant police interaction is going on, such as a deadly hostage scenario, the police supervisors calling shots at headquarters are basically flying blind. Officers on the scene can report what they're seeing, but those body cameras aren't really doing anything to help the situation at hand. But now with BDIC’s 4G LTE Live-Streaming Video Body Worn Camera, Law Enforcement Personnel on the scene can transmit a live feed from their body cameras to headquarters ...

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