czwartek, 17 maja 2012
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Centrum dowodzenia nowojorskiej policji (34)

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EN_00935088_0001

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0002

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Ray Kelly stands next to computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0003

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Ray Kelly stands next to computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0004

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Ray Kelly stands next to computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0005

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0006

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Data created from surveillance cameras. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0007

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0008

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0009

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0010

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0011

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0012

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0013

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0014

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0015

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0016

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0017

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0018

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0019

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

EN_00935088_0020

September 20, 2010, New York, New York, USA: A rare look inside the top secret New York Police Department lower Manhattan spy center, where cops monitor surveillance cameras and license plate readers around the clock. Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced that subway cameras are also being monitored in the center -- officially called The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center. Modeled after London's "Ring of Steel," the NYPD opened its coordination center in 2008, with cops monitoring feeds from hundreds of surveillance cameras and dozens of mobile license plate readers. Plans are underway to have some 3,000 surveillance cameras and as many as 96 fixed license-plate readers feeding into the center. The 24-hour center, based in a nondescript Broadway building, keeps tabs on high-profile terror targets such as the World Trade Center site and Wall Street. The NYPD also aims to install sensors to detect biological and radiological weapons. The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative will monitor the business district south of Canal Street. The program is financed through some $32 million in Homeland Security funds, part of more than $77.7 million in federal funds for counterterrorism programs, overtime and training.///Police department members monitor computer screens showing coverage from surveillance cameras around the city. Credit: Timothy Fadek / Polaris

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