This is not new (ankle monitors) it has been going on for
years.........and yes crimes have been comited by persons on ankle
monitors, they have been know to take them off and put them back
on........--- In antiextraterrestrialgroup@yahoogroups.com,
antigray@c... wrote:
> Hi Group,
> I figured out a way to apprehend the aliens when they return to
abduct any
> multiple abductees. There is an electronic monitoring system now
used by many
> law enforcement agencies to monitor people under house arrest and
on electronic
> leashes. It tells where the person wearing the electronic ankle
bracelet is
> located every second. They have a GPS system built into them. All
bracleted
> people show up on a big map on the monitoring screen at the
sheriffs headquarters.
> The systems now can be set so that if the monitored person cross
county
> borderlines, an alarm is sounded and the sheriffs go track the
person down and pick
> them up.
> Check Out:
> http://www.housearrest.com/gps.htm
> http://www.housearrest.com/products.htm
> This system can be used to monitor abductees that volunteer for
this type of
> surveillance. If they are abducted, or if the aliens remove the
ankle
> bracelet, the sheriffs can move in and stake out the abductees
house till the aliens
> bring them back.
> Please give me some input on this idea. What do you think? If you
are an
> abductee and this system was available in your area, would you use
it to help the
> police catch the aliens? (Before I get a thousand answers about
there not
> being any way to disable the alien craft, that is the easy part. It
is
> accomplished by the already proven method of disabling the craft's
avionics with
> microwave transmitters.) Additionally, if the aliens have
underground bases, the GPS
> would pinpoint where they are.
> Art
> Here is some detailed background on the monitoring system:
> The Long Arm of the Law
> Many law enforcers are now using a monitoring system that can keep
up with
> the offender at all times. It is used in conjunction with the
Global Positioning
> System. The Global Positioning System is a constellation of 24
satellites
> that orbit the earth, which was developed by the US Department of
Defense for
> military purposes.
>
> These satellites constantly transmit radio signals that are picked
up by GPS
> receivers. They can determine your location on the globe, any time,
any where,
> and in any kind of weather. GPS is not only being used by the
military --
> civilians use this system for many applications such as hiking,
boating, and map
> making.
>
> The criminal justice system is now using the Global Positioning
System to
> monitor those serving time outside of jail. What makes it superior
to the
> previous electronic monitoring system is that it tracks the
offender 24 hours a day
> -- no matter where he is -- at home, at work or in a car. In fact,
it can even
> tell which intersection he is in and what speed the car is going.
>
> Another feature is that boundaries can be set for the offender --
green
> areas where he is allowed to travel in and red areas (perhaps
around the victim's
> home) where he is not allowed. If the offender goes in one of these
areas, a
> warning signal begins to beep and doesn't stop until he is out of
the "hot
> area." Also, his parole officer is notified so he can check on the
situation.
>
> With this system, the offender's every move throughout the day can
be
> monitored and printed out on a computer if necessary. It's easy to
tell if he's been
> at the scene of a crime. Some refer to it as a "virtual jail." This
system
> takes away the opportunity to commit a crime.
>
> How does it work?
>
> The offender wears an ankle or wrist bracelet and has to carry a
mobile
> tracking pack (the receiver) wherever he goes. This receives
signals from the
> Global Positioning System satellites. They are monitored by a
monitoring center.
> If they don't carry the pack or if they try to cut the bracelet,
parole
> officers are immediately alerted -- either by pager, fax, cell
phone, or computer.
>
> What are the benefits?
>
> There are a number of benefits for using the electronic monitoring
system.
> It helps reduce the problem of overcrowding in the prison system.
It keeps the
> correctional system from building more prisons, thus saving
millions in
> taxpayer's money.
>
> Housing inmates is extremely expensive -- from $50 to $100 a day
per
> offender. The old electronic monitoring system costs from $7 to $10
a day and the GPS
> monitoring system costs about $16 a day. Millions of taxpayer's
money is being
> saved. In some places offenders pay their own bill for the
monitoring system.
> They are able to keep working and live in their own home. In
Florida,
> offenders monitored by GPS haven't committed a single felony while
on parole.
> From: http://wwwedu.ssc.nasa.gov/fad/detail.asp?
offset=70&LessonID=123
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]