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Pass.
Wow. It does have a kind-of Singapore feel to it...being able to track cars. Well, it's not like they're going to go nutcake and install a monitoring grid over the entire metropolis. They wouldn't do that, right? : "Above the Law", by David Burnham, ISBN 0-684-80699-1, 1996 : : In New York City, the FBI spent millions of dollars to install a permanent : "fully-functional real-time physical tracking network." : : It should come as no surprise that the FBI did not announce this addition : to its investigative bag of tricks: a citywide network of hidden sensing : devices that pick up signals from a moving vehicle and immediately project : the precise location on a large illuminated map located in the FBI's New : York command post. : : When the FBI's technology head was asked how the new tracking system was : working, he looked surprised, and didn't answer the question. "How did you : know about that?" he asked. : : The FBI denied a request for a tour of its Manhatten command post, where : the output from its instantaneous tracking system is displayed for the : brass. : : In 1993, however, the FBI allowed a reporter who was working on what the : bureau expected would be a friendly article to visit the inner sanctum. : : The command center, she later wrote, "looks not unlike the Starship : Enterprise, of 'Star Trek.' On the rear wall of the room are three giant : screens on which neighborhood maps, live field surveillance, and graphs : charting the progress of a manhunt can be projected. : : Law enforcement officials, at stations in three semicircular tiers of : d |
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