Remote camera system
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Users of the Flickr website browsed photos found on the camera in the hope they would yield some clues. They examined parts of car number plates, warning signs on a quarry, a pipe band and a puppy wearing a red coat, and suggested how these might help solve the mystery.Rhonda Surman, of Alness in Ross-shire, had been on holiday with her husband Sam in April when he spotted a digital camera left at the Bronze Age broch at Glenelg near Kyle of Lochalsh. Mr Surman left a note in case the owner came back and his wife handed the camera in to the police. Eight weeks later, after no one claimed it, it was returned to Mrs Surman.'I looked at the photos. There were more than 700 of them, and seemed to be mostly of a young couple in their first home, a stag night and maybe even their honeymoon somewhere in Europe,' Mrs Surman said.She added: 'I posted the photos on Flickr's help forum to see if there was any way of using it and its members to find the owner.'Immediately the web forum's members, using names such as 'Stooshie', 'Sandy', 'emarinuk' and 'howbeg' began piecing the jigsaw together.Mrs Surman said: 'Some of those on the forum looked at number plates and said the location was definitely Chelmsford or Birmingham. That turned out to be a bit of blind alley.'Then 'emarinuk', noticing pictures of a pipe band, wrote: 'Why don't you call or search about Stonehaven Pipe Band?' 'Sandy' posted: 'I was brought up in Aberdeen and by the looks of it they live in the west end of Aberdeen'A picture of a man with a puppy wearing a red coat attracted many posts, with 'howbeg' writing: 'Why not print off pictures with bloke and dug and stick it on lampposts near where you think it was taken asking if anyone knows the man and dug and if so contact whoever?'The net began to tighten when a couple of members thought they recognised the architecture in Aberdeen, trying to match lampposts in the photo and driving up and down the street where the camera's owner might be living
Action against police if no CCTV camera at crime site
CCPO says SPs to produce certificates proving installation of cameras Says legal responsibility of bank managers to ensure that alarms are in optimum working condition
LAHORE: Strict action will be taken against the police officers concerned if any crime is committed at a place where closed circuit cameras are not installed, Capital City Police Officer Muhammad Pervez Rathore has said.
In a statement, he said that the installation of CCTV camera at banks, moneychangers, financial institutions, industrial units, shops and other places where cash transactions are carried out was the responsibility of police officials. He said that the superintendents of police would be required to provide certificates within a week that 100 percent installation work of CCTV camera had been completed in their respective areas. He said that he would conduct spot checks to review security arrangements in the city, adding that strict action would be taken against officials guilty of dereliction of duty.
Legal responsibility: He also said that it was the legal responsibility of bank managers to ensure that their burglar alarms were in optimum working condition. All bank managers are bound to keep the doors of their banks locked from the inside after public-dealing hours are over, he added.
The CCPO said that the implementation of the Shops and Establishment (Security) Ordinance could help reduce crimes of serious nature as well as identify criminals in case of any incident
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