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Security · Safety · Risk Management

Helping You Successfully Navigate Chaos and Uncertainty

Pinnacle Consulting & Advisors delivers assessment-first security and risk management solutions built on 30+ years of law enforcement and corporate security experience. Every engagement is tailored, every technology deployment is purpose-driven.

30+
Years of Experience
NV
PILB Licensed #2916
BBB
Accredited
US
Nationwide Operations
NV PILB License #2916
BBB Accredited
IACP Member
ASIS International
HFTP Member
UNLV MIS Advisory Board
Urban Chamber of Commerce
Made in Nevada
ISO 9001:2015 Compliant
Technology Solutions

Solutions That Open the Door

PCA deploys and operationalizes advanced security technology for clients across every sector. These platforms are how most clients first find us, and the foundation every engagement is built on.

Soffit pedestrian safety
Pedestrian Safety

Soffit Smart Safety System

Automatic pedestrian detection and focused illumination that highlights the person crossing, not just the space. Incident detection, wrong-way driver alerts, and traffic analytics included.

Learn More →
UVSS under vehicle scan
Under Vehicle Scanning

UVSS: Under Vehicle Surveillance

High-resolution undercarriage imaging with automated anomaly detection in seconds. Real-time LPR integration. Fixed and mobile deployment configurations available.

Learn More →
iDFR indoor drone
Indoor Drone First Responder

iDFR: Autonomous Indoor Response

The only indoor platform with non-lethal firearm disruption capability. Launches within 10 seconds of breach detection. GPS-denied operation with 360-degree collision avoidance.

Learn More →
DARK WATCH
Real-Time Risk Screening

Dark Watch

API-first screening against 1,400+ intelligence sources and 450M+ global profiles. $1 per search, no SSN storage. Attaches to existing transactional data streams. No-cost proof of concept available.

Visit Dark Watch ↗
CLEARSEEK
Pattern Recognition Intelligence

ClearSeek

Deterministic pattern recognition that matches objects across video, imagery, and social media even under heavy distortion. Faster and more accurate than machine learning approaches across degraded or partial inputs.

Learn More →
Advisory Services

What We Do After the Solution Is Deployed

Technology is the hook. Advisory services are where PCA creates lasting value. Every engagement draws from four core service areas.

Investigative Doctrine & Public Safety
  • CPTED assessments integrated with surveillance, response protocols, and command operations
  • Investigative protocol, post-order development, and procedure design
  • Investigative procedure training and public safety policy design
  • Law enforcement compatible command integration and documented deployment governance
  • Security expert civil case review and analysis
  • Continuity of Operations Plan development
Governance, Compliance & Organizational Resilience
  • ISO 42001 governance program design aligned with NIST CSF 2.0
  • ISO 9001 Quality Management System design and process assessment
  • Compliance program design, internal audit, and process integrity oversight
  • Code of Conduct, Ethics policy, and regulatory guidance
  • Governmental liaison coordination
  • Organizational resilience planning
Security Assessment & Site Analysis
  • Physical site security assessments for facilities, campuses, and properties
  • Camera system and technology audits for existing infrastructure
  • Risk assessment and methodology to cure identified vulnerabilities
  • Effective assessment of mechanisms to protect life, property, and operations
  • Post-incident site reviews to identify contributing gaps
  • Expert witness services for security-related civil cases
Legislative, Regulatory & Project Alignment
  • Documented deployment governance and defensibility standards
  • Legislative and regulatory coordination related to public safety initiatives
  • Project management oversight for security modernization initiatives
  • Regulatory and licensing guidance with governmental liaison coordination
  • Governmental liaison coordination with state and local agencies
  • Lobbying within the State of Nevada on public safety and security matters
  • Code of Conduct & Ethics policy development
AI Governance Advisory
  • ISO 42001:2023 AI Management System design and implementation
  • AI policy development and scope definition
  • Internal gap assessment and certification roadmap planning
  • AI risk identification and mitigation program design
  • Alignment with NIST CSF 2.0 for AI-inclusive risk programs
  • Governance oversight structure and accountability design
  • Documentation and evidence management for audit readiness
  • Ongoing advisory and program maintenance retainer options
About PCA

Founded on the Principle That You Don't Know What You Don't Know

Pinnacle Consulting & Advisors was founded to give public and private organizations access to the strategic advantages typically available only to large corporations. Our team draws from Fortune 500 companies, federal government, and law enforcement, with operations spanning the United States and select international locations.

In every engagement, our focus is on forging an efficient, results-driven relationship. We work collaboratively to create a customized plan of action, tailored to the specific needs of your organization. We are fully licensed, insured, and governed by a strict Code of Ethics and Security Policy.

Our Approach
1

Assessment First

Every engagement begins with a thorough assessment of your site, operations, and risk environment. No technology recommendation comes before understanding the problem.

2

Tailored Plan

We build a site-specific plan combining the right mix of technology, advisory services, and operational procedures, not a catalog of products.

3

Supported Deployment

We see every implementation through: training, SOPs, integration, oversight design, and long-term operational support.

Additional Advisory Services

Broader Business Advisory

Beyond security and technology, PCA brings structured operational expertise to broader organizational challenges.

ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management

Quality Management System design, gap assessment, and process integrity oversight aligned with ISO 9001:2015. PCA guides organizations through certification readiness, internal audit preparation, and ongoing QMS maintenance.

NIST CSF 2.0 Alignment

Cybersecurity and operational risk program alignment with NIST CSF 2.0, designed for organizations deploying advanced technology systems and integrated with ISO 42001 governance programs.

Workers' Compensation & Unemployment

Program design and management through third-party insurance administrator partnerships. Appeals management and cost mitigation strategies built on years of successful case navigation.

Business Process Improvement

Operational and financial reviews with a focus on hospitality, food and beverage, and point-of-sale systems. Expert sourcing, reservation systems, and revenue management included.

Ready to Start With an Assessment?

Every engagement begins with understanding your specific environment, risk profile, and operational needs. No technology recommendation before that conversation.

Request an Assessment
Home/Solutions/Soffit
Pedestrian Safety Solution

Visibility Is Safety:
A Smarter Approach to Saving Lives

Advanced pedestrian illumination that highlights the person crossing the street, not just the space around them. Integrated analytics add real-time detection for accidents, slip-and-fall events, and wrong-way drivers.

The Problem

Strobes Alert Drivers to the Light. This System Shows Them the Person.

Most crosswalk systems depend on flashing lights or strobes. At night, those lights draw attention to themselves, not the pedestrian crossing. Drivers become desensitized. Some speed up to beat the crossing entirely.

There are only two guaranteed ways to eliminate pedestrian fatalities: remove all vehicles or remove all pedestrians from roadways. Neither is realistic. What is realistic is focused illumination and smarter analytics, highlighting the person, not just the space.

The Soffit system activates automatically when a pedestrian is detected. No button press required. Day and night functionality. It works as a standalone system or integrates fully into existing traffic control infrastructure.

Soffit dynamic illumination system overview

Key Capabilities
  • Automatic pedestrian detection and focused illumination
  • Accident and incident detection
  • Wrong-way driver alerts
  • Slip and fall detection
  • Optional traffic flow analytics
  • Automatic strobe activation with no button press required
  • Day and night functionality
  • Standalone or fully integrated with traffic control infrastructure
  • No biometric data stored; fully privacy compliant
Current Deployment

Dublin, Ohio is one example of a current Soffit deployment, operating as a live pedestrian safety system at an active intersection.

Security Applications

Beyond Pedestrian Safety

While pedestrian safety is the core function, the Soffit integrated analytics platform has direct applications for security operations, situational awareness, and risk mitigation at any location where pedestrian and vehicle traffic intersect.

  • Real-time incident detection that reduces response time and improves first responder accuracy
  • Wrong-way vehicle detection with configurable alert thresholds
  • Slip, fall, and accident detection with automatic notification
  • Analytics data supporting post-incident investigations and liability documentation
  • Configurable alerting to security operations centers, dispatch, and designated personnel
  • Scalable monitoring across multiple intersections from a single dashboard
  • Integration with existing traffic management and ITS infrastructure
ITS Integration

Built for Intelligent Transportation System Deployment

Soffit is designed for integration into existing traffic control and Intelligent Transportation System architectures. It can operate as a standalone system or connect to centralized traffic operations centers through standard protocols, making it suitable for city-wide pedestrian safety programs and not just single-intersection pilots.

  • Compatible with existing traffic signal control systems
  • Integrates with city traffic operations center dashboards
  • Supports standard ITS communication protocols
  • Scalable from a single intersection to a citywide network
Our Role

Assessment Through Deployment and Beyond

Every Soffit deployment begins with a site assessment that evaluates intersection geometry, lighting conditions, existing infrastructure, and traffic patterns. No equipment is ordered until the right configuration is confirmed for that specific location.

  • Physical site assessment and intersection analysis
  • Pilot deployment design and proof-of-concept planning
  • City stakeholder and traffic engineering coordination
  • Integration with existing operations and infrastructure
  • Operator training and alert protocol design
  • Performance monitoring and long-term optimization support
Who Uses This

Municipalities, Universities, and High-Traffic Private Properties

  • City and county traffic engineering departments seeking to reduce pedestrian fatalities
  • Universities and campuses with high pedestrian and vehicle intersection volume
  • Hospital and healthcare campuses with vulnerable pedestrian populations
  • Private commercial properties with active parking and crosswalk exposure
  • Transit agencies and transportation authorities managing multimodal intersections
Works Well With

Soffit pairs naturally with PCA advisory services and integrates with leading ITS platforms.

AI Governance Advisory
For municipalities and agencies deploying multiple analytics-driven traffic and safety systems, PCA builds the governance scaffolding (ISO/IEC 42001 and NIST AI RMF) that keeps deployments accountable and audit-ready.
Site Assessments & CPTED
PCA's assessment-first approach identifies the right placement and configuration before any equipment is ordered. CPTED principles guide intersection design choices that extend beyond lighting alone.
ISS Intellisection (ITS Platform)
Soffit integrates natively with ISS SecurOS Intellisection for end-to-end intersection monitoring, and supports integration with most third-party Intelligent Transportation System platforms.
Additional ISS Analytics
Soffit can be combined with the broader ISS SecurOS portfolio of 50+ AI-powered analytic modules for capabilities such as license plate recognition, behavioral analysis, and incident management at the same intersection.

Want a deeper look at the operational concept and use cases for Soffit?

Read the Deep Dive

Have questions about Soffit?

See the FAQ

Request a Demo or Pilot Deployment

Currently introducing this system regionally and working with city stakeholders to establish local pilot sites. Contact us to discuss your intersection or crosswalk challenge.

Request a Demonstration
Home/Solutions/Soffit/Deep Dive
Long-Form Article

Pedestrian Safety Through Visibility, Not Activation

Why most crosswalk lighting fails when it matters most, and how focused pedestrian illumination changes the equation.

Section 1

The Problem: Why Current Pedestrian Safety Lighting Falls Short

Pedestrian fatalities continue to rise in high-traffic urban areas. The most common safety measure at crosswalks has not changed in decades: flashing strobes or beacons activated by the pedestrian pressing a button. The design assumes the pedestrian sees the button, presses it, and the system works. Each of those assumptions breaks in the field.

Drivers become desensitized to flashing lights. At night, those same strobes create glare that pulls the eye away from the actual person crossing. In some cases, drivers see the lights and accelerate to clear the crosswalk before the pedestrian arrives. When the activation button is missed, ignored, or unreachable, the system does nothing at all. The pedestrian, who is the one variable that actually needs to be visible, remains in the dark.

The deeper problem is light design. Most modern street lighting is built to illuminate the roadway, the signs, and the buildings around it. Pedestrians blend into that environment. At night, a person standing in or entering a crosswalk does not stand out from the background. The eye registers the lights, the signs, and the painted lines. The person is the last thing the driver sees.

There are only two guaranteed ways to eliminate pedestrian fatalities entirely: remove all vehicles, or remove all pedestrians from roadways. Neither is realistic. What is realistic is changing where the light is pointed.

Section 2

The Operational Concept: Light the Person, Not the Pavement

The Pedestrian Illumination Safety Soffit System operates on a different principle than traditional crosswalk lighting. Instead of broadcasting attention to the crossing area, it focuses directional light on the pedestrian using it.

Three design choices make the difference.

First, detection is automatic. Sensors monitor a defined zone around the crossing. When a person enters, the Soffit illuminates that person directly. No button press is required. The system does not depend on the person crossing to participate in the operation of the safety equipment.

Second, the light is focused on the individual, not on the painted bars or the surrounding area. The pedestrian appears as a clearly defined silhouette to approaching drivers, distinct from the visual noise of the road. This is the opposite of how strobes work, which point light back at oncoming traffic and rely on the driver registering the flashing pattern.

Third, the system operates day and night. Visibility loss is not exclusively a night problem. Glare, weather, sun angle, and complex urban backgrounds all reduce pedestrian visibility during daylight as well. The Soffit's focused illumination improves how clearly a pedestrian is seen across the full range of conditions.

The system can run as a standalone safety enhancement at a single crossing, or it can be integrated into existing traffic control and surveillance infrastructure. That choice is determined by the project scope and the operational needs of the site.

Section 3

Built-In Intelligence Beyond Lighting

The Soffit is more than a lighting fixture. The platform supports an optional analytics module that produces real-time intelligence for traffic safety and risk management.

  • Accident detection at the crossing or surrounding intersection
  • Wrong-way driver alerts
  • Slip and fall detection within the crossing area
  • Traffic flow and pedestrian counting analytics
  • Automatic strobe activation as a secondary alert layer
  • Continuous day and night operation

No biometric data is captured, stored, or transmitted by the analytics module. The system is built to operate within privacy standards from the start.

Section 4

Integration Approach

A Soffit deployment is more than installing a fixture. The platform changes how the site addresses pedestrian risk, and that requires integration with the existing safety, traffic, or surveillance posture. PCA's role on every Soffit engagement covers:

  • A site assessment that identifies the specific risk factors at the crossing or intersection, including sight lines, lighting conditions, sign placement, traffic volume, and any obstructions
  • A pilot deployment plan when proof-of-concept evaluation is appropriate before a wider rollout
  • Integration planning with existing electrical or solar infrastructure on site
  • Long-term use strategy covering maintenance, reporting, and how the system connects to broader municipal or facility safety operations
  • Optional training of the client's own facility personnel to perform the physical installation, which lowers cost and keeps maintenance capability with the client

PCA does not resell equipment in isolation. Each Soffit deployment is built around the specific intersection or crossing, with the operational outcome defined before the hardware is procured.

Section 5

Pilot Sites and Engagement

The Soffit System is currently being introduced regionally. Pilot deployments and proof-of-concept installations are available with city stakeholders, transportation authorities, private campus operators, and facility managers who own or operate intersections with elevated pedestrian risk. The platform is appropriate for both municipal safety projects and private facilities such as resorts, corporate campuses, hospitals, and business centers where pedestrian and vehicle paths intersect.

Discuss a Pilot Deployment or Site Assessment

Contact PCA to discuss how the Soffit System can be deployed at your intersection or crossing.

Contact Us
Home/Solutions/iDFR
Indoor Drone as a First Responder

Redefining Facility Safety:
Semi-Autonomous iDFR Drones for Threat Response

Fire alarms and sprinklers are code-mandated in every building. When it comes to violent threats, most facilities still depend on passive cameras and manual notification. The iDFR changes that equation.

Brecourt Close Quarters Drone (CQD) hardware unit

Brecourt Close Quarters Drone (CQD): indoor first responder platform

The Problem

The First Few Seconds Are the Most Deadly. Most Facilities Have No Answer for That.

Most facilities still rely on passive surveillance. Cameras record but do not act. Analytics must first identify a threat, operators must validate it, and only then does the notification process begin. By that point, harm may already be occurring.

Pinnacle Consulting & Advisors, in partnership with Brecourt Solutions, introduces the Close Quarters Drone (CQD), an indoor drone first responder designed to act in the most critical seconds. Purpose-built for GPS-denied environments, the CQD launches instantly, locates and tracks threats, streams real-time intelligence, and deploys non-lethal disruption tools.

Why Conventional Drones Don't Work Indoors
  • Most drones depend on GPS signals that are blocked or degraded inside buildings
  • Conventional drones require a trained pilot and spotter to operate, pulling personnel away from other critical tasks
  • Standard systems fail to fly, lose positional stability, or are unsafe in confined environments like hallways and stairwells
The Brecourt Difference

Advanced onboard navigation sensors and visual-inertial localization allow the CQD to fly semi-autonomously in hallways, rooms, stairwells, and confined structures with no GPS required.

How It Works

Four Phases. Seconds to Deploy.

Phase 1

Detection

Integrated video analytics or manual operator input identifies a threat. The system can be configured to detect a firearm or other dangerous item visually.

Phase 2

Deployment

The drone launches autonomously and enters scanning mode, using onboard analytics to search for the threat within its visual range. No onsite pilot is required.

Phase 3

Disruption

A remote pilot from an operations center or on-site takes control, navigates to the threat, streams live video, and can employ non-lethal disruption tactics.

Phase 4

Support

The drone provides ongoing surveillance under pilot control until the incident concludes, acting as a force multiplier for responding law enforcement and security.

Platform Capabilities

The Close Quarters Drone (CQD) by Brecourt Solutions

  • Semi-autonomous and full manual control options, both available now
  • GPS-denied operations using visual-inertial localization for stable indoor flight
  • 360-degree collision avoidance designed for hallways, stairwells, and confined spaces
  • Non-lethal countermeasures to disrupt and slow an attacker
  • Real-time live video feed streamed to security teams, SOC, and command posts
  • Docking station deployment: launches within 10 seconds of breach detection
  • Docking station placement within 30 meters of any breach point
  • Only indoor platform on the market with non-lethal firearm disruption capability
  • Fully autonomous deployment in final development
What Sets It Apart

The Only Indoor Platform With Non-Lethal Disruption Capability

Fire alarms and sprinklers are code-mandated because waiting for the fire department costs lives. The same logic applies to active threats. The iDFR is the first indoor-capable drone platform that does not just observe a threat. It can actively disrupt one, buying critical time for evacuation and law enforcement response.

  • Acts within the first 10 seconds, before law enforcement arrival
  • No trained pilot required on site. A remote pilot operates from the SOC or an offsite location
  • Streams live intelligence directly to responding officers before they enter
  • Reduces the information gap that causes responders to operate blind
PCA's Role

Assessment, Integration, and Operational Readiness

PCA goes beyond equipment placement. Every iDFR deployment is preceded by a full facility assessment that determines coverage zones, docking station placement, integration points with existing cameras and access control, and the SOC or remote guarding configuration needed to operate it.

  • Facility threat assessment and vulnerability analysis before any deployment
  • Docking station placement planning for maximum coverage with minimum blind spots
  • Camera system audit and analytics integration planning
  • SOC configuration and remote guarding firm integration
  • Law enforcement pre-briefing and coordination protocol development
  • SOP development, staff training, and after-action review design
Read the Louvre Case Study ↗
Sectors

Where iDFR Deployments Make the Most Difference

  • K-12 schools and universities where response time gaps are most critical
  • Houses of worship with large congregant populations and open access environments
  • Hospitals and healthcare facilities with complex interior layouts
  • Corporate campuses with multiple buildings and access-controlled interiors
  • Hotels, casinos, and hospitality venues with high occupancy and limited sight lines
  • Remote guarding firms and SOC operators seeking to extend physical response capability
Early Access Program

Be Part of What's Next

Brecourt is in the process of developing the fully autonomous drone package, including outdoor capability. PCA is currently seeking a small number of agencies, security guard companies, remote guarding firms, and SOC-driven organizations to participate as early access partners, providing real-world feedback that shapes system development.

See It in Action

CQD drone in flight, April 2026

Works Well With

iDFR is most effective as part of a layered security posture.

AI Governance Advisory
Indoor autonomous response platforms with AI-driven flight and decision support require strong governance scaffolding. PCA aligns iDFR deployments with ISO/IEC 42001 and the NIST AI RMF to keep autonomous operation accountable and audit-ready.
Security Assessments & CPTED
PCA assesses each facility before deployment to determine docking station placement, flight paths, sight lines, and coverage zones. CPTED principles guide the integration of iDFR with broader interior security design.
ClearSeek and ISS Analytics
iDFR's video and audio feeds can be paired with ClearSeek pattern recognition for cross-camera search and the ISS SecurOS analytic portfolio for behavioral analysis, license plate recognition, and incident management.
Government Sector Services
iDFR's natural customer base includes government facilities, school district police, and municipal sites. PCA's government sector experience supports procurement, deployment planning, and ongoing program management across these settings.

Want a deeper look at the operational concept and the four phases of a CQD response?

Read the Deep Dive

Have questions about iDFR?

See the FAQ

Explore Pilot Deployment or Partnership

Law enforcement, school administrators, private security managers, and high-risk property owners are invited to connect about pilot opportunities and early access.

Contact Us Today
Home/Solutions/iDFR/Deep Dive
Long-Form Article

Indoor Threat Response: A Deeper Look at the iDFR System

Why indoor active-threat response demands a different design than outdoor or perimeter security, and how the Close Quarters Drone changes the timeline of an incident.

Section 1

The Problem: The Indoor Response Gap

Every building in the country protects against fire. Smoke detectors, sprinklers, suppression systems, and evacuation routes are code-mandated and culturally accepted as standard infrastructure. Fire events are statistically rare, yet automated systems are everywhere because the consequences of a delayed response are unacceptable.

The equivalent protections for violent threats are almost nonexistent. Most facilities still rely on passive surveillance where cameras record but do not act, locked doors that fail once an intruder is inside, and manual notifications that depend on someone seeing the threat, confirming it, and starting a dispatch process. Video analytics can flag a weapon, but those alerts then require human validation, a notification chain, and physical response. By the time security or law enforcement arrives, the most dangerous seconds have already passed.

The gap is structural. Indoor active-threat response was never built into facility design the way fire safety was. The result is a class of high-consequence event that has no automated countermeasure inside the building.

Section 2

The Operational Concept

The Close Quarters Drone (CQD) is built specifically for the indoor problem. It was designed from the start by people with military and first-responder backgrounds and direct experience in interior threat environments. That heritage is the reason it operates in places where conventional drones either fail outright or require so much pilot input that they cannot be deployed at the speed an incident demands.

Three design choices define how the CQD operates.

First, GPS-denied flight is the default rather than the exception. Schools, office buildings, parking structures, and event venues block or degrade GPS signal. The CQD uses visual-inertial localization, onboard sensors, and proprietary navigation software to fly through hallways, stairwells, and confined rooms without external beacons or GPS. That capability is not a feature add-on. It is the foundation that lets the CQD operate at all in the spaces where indoor threats actually occur.

Second, the drone reduces the pilot burden dramatically. Conventional drones require a trained pilot on site and often a spotter, which pulls personnel away from the response. The CQD launches from a fixed docking station, flies semi-autonomously toward the area of concern, and uses onboard analytics to continue scanning. A remote operator located in a security operations center anywhere can take control when intervention is appropriate. Operational testing has been conducted with operators controlling the CQD from more than 2,000 miles away from the facility being defended, with low latency on both control and video.

Third, the platform is a force multiplier rather than a replacement. The CQD is not a substitute for sworn personnel. It is a first arrival on scene that buys time, streams visual intelligence, and creates situational awareness during the seconds when responding teams are still mobilizing. The CQD also carries a nonlethal disruption capability, which is currently the only such capability available on an indoor drone platform.

Section 3

The Four Phases

A CQD deployment unfolds across four phases, each measured in seconds rather than minutes.

Phase 1. Detection

The event is triggered either by integrated video analytics that visually identify a weapon or other threat indicator, or by a manual command from an operator. A human is always part of the validation step. Detection is the only phase where time is spent reviewing rather than acting, and even that review is measured in seconds because the analytics flag the visual signature in near real time.

Phase 2. Deployment

The drone launches immediately from its docking station and flies toward the area of concern using onboard navigation. No pilot is needed on site. The drone is moving while the rest of the response is still being notified.

Phase 3. Disruption

A remote operator from a security operations center, or an operator on site, takes control of the drone. The operator streams live video to responding law enforcement, navigates the drone to acquire the threat visually, and can deploy nonlethal countermeasures to slow or disorient the attacker. The objective in this phase is to compress the time between the start of the incident and the moment responders have control of the scene.

Phase 4. Support

The drone remains on station under operator control until the incident concludes. The CQD continues to stream video, supports law enforcement movement through the facility, and assists with medical response decisions by giving responders visual access to areas they have not yet cleared.

All four phases can unfold within seconds of a verified threat, in a building with no GPS signal, with no on-site pilot, and without requiring responding personnel to enter unknown spaces blind.

Section 4

Integration Approach

Adding a CQD platform to a facility is not the same as installing a camera. The platform changes the operational doctrine of how the site responds to a threat. PCA's role on every iDFR engagement is to make sure the doctrine is built before the hardware is deployed.

Each engagement includes:

  • A threat assessment that establishes which spaces, entry points, and event types the CQD is being deployed to address
  • A camera and analytics audit that confirms whether existing surveillance can support the detection step or identifies what needs to change
  • An integration plan that connects the CQD to the security operations center, the dispatch chain, and where appropriate, local law enforcement
  • Operator training on both manual and semi-autonomous modes
  • Standard operating procedures and use-of-force policies that govern when the nonlethal capability is deployed and by whom
  • After-action reviews following any live deployment or planned exercise, used to refine the deployment doctrine over time

The CQD platform is only as effective as the procedures around it. A drone with no SOP is a tool waiting to be used incorrectly. PCA builds the doctrine first.

Section 5

Early Access Program and Engagement

The current production CQD is available now. The fully autonomous version of the platform, which will reduce arrival times further and remove the need for an operator during routine surveillance use, is in the final stages of development.

PCA is currently working with:

  • Law enforcement agencies evaluating indoor response capability
  • School administrators and district safety leadership
  • Private security managers responsible for high-risk venues, large corporate campuses, or major events
  • Remote guarding firms and SOC-driven security operations interested in piloting the platform under their existing remote monitoring workflow

The Early Access Program for SOC-controlled iDFR deployment is opening to a limited number of remote guarding and SOC organizations. Participants help shape system development and gain access to a capability that is still in active refinement. Early Access participation is not a procurement commitment.

A hypothetical case study applying the iDFR concept to the 2025 Louvre heist, illustrating how indoor response timing changes when a CQD is part of the facility plan, is available on LinkedIn: Turning Minutes into Control: How iDFR Could Have Changed the Louvre.

Discuss a Pilot Deployment or Facility Assessment

Contact PCA to discuss how the iDFR can be integrated into your operational environment.

Contact Us
Home/Solutions/UVSS
Under Vehicle Scanning Solution

Know What Is Under Every Vehicle Before It Enters Your Property

High-resolution undercarriage imaging, AI-powered anomaly detection, and real-time LPR integration, delivered and operationalized by PCA through our partnership with SecurOS.

Sample UVSS undercarriage scan showing full high-resolution undercarriage image

Sample UVSS undercarriage scan, high-resolution imaging in real time

The Limitation of Traditional Methods

Mirrors and Canine Inspections Are Slow, Inconsistent, and Expose Personnel to Risk

Traditional under-vehicle inspection relies on handheld mirrors or canine teams. These methods create traffic bottlenecks, fatigue operators, and expose security personnel to risk from moving vehicles.

UVSS delivers a complete undercarriage scan in seconds, capturing high-resolution images analyzed in real time. Suspicious zones are flagged automatically. Operators can direct their attention to specific areas rather than searching blindly. Throughput improves. Accuracy improves. Personnel stay safe.

Core Platform Capabilities
  • High-definition machine vision cameras with adaptive LED lighting and patented dewarping technology
  • AI-powered automated foreign object detection (FOD) and anomaly mapping
  • Real-time cross-referencing with LPR/ANPR and facial identification when required
  • Fixed and mobile deployment configurations
  • Centralized monitoring from a single operator interface across multiple checkpoints
  • IP68 weatherproofing and 30-ton-per-axle load capacity for 24/7 operation
  • GSOC and access control system integration
Where UVSS Is Deployed

Industries and Environments

Airports & Seaports

High-volume access points requiring continuous screening without creating bottlenecks for cargo, personnel, or passenger vehicles.

Government & Defense

Classified facilities and secure perimeters where every vehicle entry must be documented and screened against known threat profiles.

Energy & Critical Infrastructure

Power generation facilities, substations, and pipeline access roads where unauthorized vehicle intrusion represents a high-consequence risk.

Corporate & Industrial Campuses

Multi-entry facilities with high daily vehicle traffic that need continuous screening without slowing operations.

Stadiums & Large Venues

Event-based deployment using mobile UVSS units for temporary access point screening at large public gatherings.

Customs & Border Security

Rapid screening of commercial vehicles and passenger vehicles at land crossings where throughput and detection accuracy must both be high.

<<>>
UVSS marketing graphic showing platform and scan capability

UVSS scan capability overview

SecurOS UVSS operator dashboard showing live vehicle scan and LPR data

SecurOS operator dashboard with live scan and LPR integration

See It in Action

UVSS system overview

Mobile UVSS deployment

Why PCA Clients Choose This Deployment Model

Technology Is Only as Good as Its Operational Integration

PCA goes beyond equipment delivery. We embed UVSS into your daily access control operations so that it creates measurable, defensible value from day one. Throughput improves. Documentation improves. Accountability improves. Every scan is timestamped, stored, and searchable.

  • Define clear screening objectives with your leadership before any configuration begins
  • Conduct a site assessment to confirm the right deployment type (fixed, semi-fixed, or mobile) for your access geometry
  • Build oversight processes that strengthen accountability and support compliance and audit requirements
  • Confirm staff training is complete and SOPs are in place before go-live
  • Establish reporting structures that deliver meaningful intelligence rather than raw image data
  • Integrate with existing GSOC, VMS, or access control platforms for a unified operating picture
  • Design for scalability so the system grows as your threat profile changes
Operational Benefits

What Changes on Day One

  • Complete undercarriage scans in seconds with no vehicle stop required in many configurations
  • Faster and more accurate inspections with reduced congestion at access points
  • Higher detection rates for explosives, contraband, and vehicle tampering attempts
  • Automated, timestamped audit trails supporting incident investigation and regulatory compliance
  • Centralized monitoring across multiple checkpoints from a single operator interface
  • LPR cross-referencing allows flagged plates to trigger automatic alerts before the vehicle reaches the barrier
  • Integration into GSOC, access control, and incident management systems
Partner: SecurOS

PCA deploys UVSS through its partnership with ISS SecurOS, a globally deployed intelligent video platform. SecurOS provides the underlying analytics engine, the LPR integration, the centralized dashboard, and the operator alerting system. PCA provides assessment, deployment governance, and integration with your existing security infrastructure.

Works Well With

UVSS pairs naturally with PCA advisory services and integrates with the broader ISS SecurOS platform.

Dark Watch
Screen drivers and passengers against real-time risk data at the same access point. UVSS scans the vehicle. Dark Watch screens the people in it.
Site Assessments & CPTED
Access point design begins with PCA's assessment of traffic flow, sight lines, vehicle barrier placement, and operator positioning. CPTED principles inform how UVSS integrates into a broader access control posture.
ISS SecurOS Integration
UVSS is a native module within the ISS SecurOS Video Intelligence Platform. Each scan can integrate directly with SecurOS FaceX for driver identification, LPR/ANPR for vehicle matching, and the broader SecurOS analytic portfolio for cross-system intelligence.
Compliance Services
For government, defense, energy, and critical infrastructure deployments, UVSS scans become part of a documented audit trail. PCA's compliance services support the regulatory and audit requirements that follow.
AI Governance Advisory
Automated anomaly detection and AI-driven threat assessment require governance scaffolding. PCA aligns UVSS deployments with ISO/IEC 42001 and the NIST AI RMF for organizations that need accountability over automated security decisions.

Want a deeper look at the operational concept and use cases for UVSS?

Read the Deep Dive

Have questions about UVSS?

See the FAQ

Request a Demonstration or Proof of Concept

Permanent installation, mobile pilot, or multi-site program: PCA designs the right configuration for your site and security objectives.

Contact PCA
Home/Solutions/UVSS/Deep Dive
Long-Form Article

From Manual Inspection to Automated Vehicle Screening

Why under-vehicle scanning matters at access points, and how automated imaging, comparative analysis, and identity linkage replace the limits of mirrors, canines, and manual inspection.

Section 1

The Problem: Manual Inspection at Vehicle Access Points

Vehicle access control is one of the most consistent vulnerabilities in physical security. The standard inspection methods, mirrors on poles and trained canines, have not changed substantively in decades. Each has a known set of limits.

Mirror inspections require an operator to position themselves near a moving vehicle, often crouched at ground level, with a limited view of any single area at any moment. The result is slow, physically demanding, and inconsistent across operators and shifts. Documentation of what was actually inspected is rarely captured, which means there is no audit trail when a question arises later.

Canine inspections are effective for specific threat profiles but require trained handlers and animals, take time per vehicle, and cannot operate continuously. Throughput at busy access points becomes a tradeoff between security and operational flow.

Both methods share a structural limitation: they capture nothing. There is no comparison across visits, no record of what the undercarriage looked like the last time the same vehicle entered, no link between the inspection and the driver, and no way to identify modifications, new components, or concealed objects that were not present on a prior visit.

The underlying problem is that vehicle inspection at most facilities is still an act, not a system.

Section 2

The Operational Concept: Imaging, Analysis, and Comparison

The Under-Vehicle Surveillance System (UVSS) replaces the inspection act with a continuous imaging and analysis system. Vehicles drive across a recessed or surface-mounted camera array. The system captures high-resolution images of the entire undercarriage in seconds, stitches those images into a complete view, and presents the result to the operator at a workstation a safe distance from the vehicle.

Four design choices define how UVSS operates.

First, the imaging is automatic. Each vehicle that passes is scanned without any operator action at the point of capture. The system uses adaptive LED illumination and patented dewarping technology to produce clear, distortion-free composite images, even when the vehicle is moving at varying speeds.

Second, the system applies automated analysis. Onboard analytics highlight suspicious zones on the undercarriage, including foreign objects, anomalies, mechanical alterations, and concealment attempts. The operator's attention is directed to specific areas of the image rather than spent on visual search.

Third, every scan is linked to identity. UVSS integrates with license plate recognition, and where required, driver or passenger identification at the access point. Every undercarriage scan can be tied to a specific vehicle and individual, creating a complete audit trail.

Fourth, the system compares against history. Each scan is stored and time-stamped. When the same vehicle returns, the current scan can be compared against prior visits to identify modifications, new components, damage, or concealed items that were not present before. This is the capability that mirrors and canines cannot replicate at any scale.

Section 3

Deployment Architecture

UVSS is delivered in both fixed and mobile configurations to match the operational profile of the site.

Fixed installations are appropriate for critical infrastructure, border crossings, government facilities, and other locations where continuous inspection at a specific access point is required. The platform supports up to 30 tons per axle, holds an IP68 weatherproof rating, and operates 24/7 across extreme temperature and weather conditions.

Mobile units are packaged in rugged transport cases for rapid setup at temporary venues, event sites, or facility locations where the inspection requirement is short-term, seasonal, or site-specific. Setup and teardown are measured in hours rather than days.

Multiple UVSS checkpoints can be coordinated from a single operator interface. Images, video, and analytics from each station synchronize to a central monitoring system, which allows large facilities, multi-entry campuses, and event sites to operate inspections from a single command center.

Section 4

Integration Approach

A UVSS deployment is only valuable when it is connected to the systems and decisions it is meant to support. PCA's role on every UVSS engagement covers:

  • Integration with existing license plate recognition, gate controls, access control systems, and broader surveillance networks
  • Connection to the GSOC or command structure that owns oversight and response
  • Operator training on the capture, analysis, and comparative review workflows
  • Standard operating procedures that govern when the system is used, who reviews flagged scans, and how findings are escalated
  • Reporting structures that surface meaningful intelligence rather than raw image counts
  • Long-term life cycle support including configuration changes, software updates, and scaling across multiple sites

The platform becomes a force multiplier only when the procedures, training, and oversight wrap around it correctly. PCA builds those layers as part of every deployment.

Section 5

Industries and Engagement

UVSS deployments are appropriate for environments where vehicle-borne threats represent a credible risk or where compliance and liability documentation require a verifiable audit trail of vehicle access. Common deployment sites include:

  • Airports and seaports
  • Customs and border control checkpoints
  • Government and defense facilities
  • Energy and critical infrastructure
  • Industrial and corporate campuses
  • Stadiums, cultural venues, and large-scale events

Pilot deployments and proof-of-concept evaluations are available before a full installation commitment.

Schedule a Demonstration or Proof of Concept

Contact PCA to discuss a UVSS demonstration, pilot deployment, or permanent installation.

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Mobile Surveillance Platform

Solar-Powered Mobile Surveillance: Deployable Anywhere, NDAA Compliant

Access to a large inventory of NDAA-compliant solar-powered surveillance trailers through PCA's partnership with SCT, with preferred pricing and hundreds of units available for single-site deployments and large multi-site programs nationwide.

SCT solar-powered mobile surveillance trailers ready for deployment

SCT trailer inventory available through PCA partnership

The Platform

Infrastructure-Free Surveillance That's Up and Running the Same Day It Arrives

These trailers require no permanent power source, no trenching, and no construction. Solar arrays charge rapidly during daylight hours, and onboard lithium battery systems keep cameras and analytics running for extended periods independently.

Deployed on the Las Vegas Strip, Downtown Las Vegas, at election sites, and for law enforcement needs. These platforms have been tested in some of the most demanding real-world environments. PCA's partnership with SCT provides preferred pricing that normally only large, long-term programs access.

Standard Platform Specifications
  • Solar array with high-capacity lithium batteries for extended operation without external power
  • Optional 110V outlet or generator connection for supplemental power in low-sunlight environments
  • High mast of over 26 feet for wide-area coverage
  • 8-camera head unit: 4 fixed, 4 PTZ with 30x optical zoom
  • 1080p high-definition cameras with approximately 300-foot infrared range
  • All-weather climate-controlled housing
  • Built-in GPS tracking and anti-tamper alerts with remote notifications
  • 4G LTE wireless streaming standard; also supports point-to-point, Wi-Fi, and satellite
  • Thermal signature tracking and active deterrence options
Analytics & Monitoring

Intelligent, Not Just Watchful

Video Analytics

  • Search people by clothing color
  • Identify vehicles by color and type
  • License plate recognition with alerting
  • Thermal signature tracking
  • Line crossing, intrusion, and loitering detection

Remote Management

  • Centralized dashboard with mobile access
  • Authorized staff can monitor cameras, review events, and manage alerts from one interface
  • RTSP streams available for integration into your existing VMS
  • Historic footage accessible through platform interface

Monitoring Options

  • Internal staff access through dashboard or mobile app
  • Integration with existing VMS or security platform
  • Third-party live agent monitoring available at additional cost
  • Designed to be monitored the way your operation is structured
SCT surveillance trailer head unit with multi-camera configuration

Standard head unit configuration

SCT solar mobile surveillance trailer inventory

SCT trailer inventory available through PCA

See It in Action

SCT solar mobile surveillance platform deployment

Where These Trailers Fit
  • Special events, festivals, and temporary venues requiring rapid deployment
  • Parking structures and surface lots, most garages depending on clearance height
  • Construction sites, laydown yards, and materials staging areas
  • Remote facilities, pipeline access roads, and utility infrastructure sites
  • Short-term risk hot spots identified through a PCA security assessment
  • Long-term sites where traditional fixed CCTV is not cost-effective or structurally feasible
  • Election sites and government facilities requiring temporary coverage
  • Law enforcement operations requiring mobile situational awareness
  • Downtown corridors, entertainment districts, and public gathering areas
Rental and Purchase Options

Standard offering is a fixed monthly rental that includes warranty and repair coverage in most cases where damage did not involve intentional acts or negligence. Purchase options are available for organizations preferring to own the asset outright for long-term deployments.

  • Delivery, setup, and removal are not included in the lease and are billed separately, quoted based on site location and scope
  • Short-term event rentals supported with advance scheduling
  • Highly customizable: camera packages, PTZ configurations, thermal, audio deterrence, and analytics
  • Continental US coverage. Alaska and Hawaii supported with advance planning
  • Camera brand alternatives available: Axis, Panasonic, Milesight, Hanwha, and others
  • Multi-unit programs available with preferred pricing through PCA's SCT partnership
Works Well With

SCT trailers are most effective as part of a larger, integrated security approach.

Site Assessments & CPTED
SCT placement starts with PCA's assessment of sight lines, lighting conditions, sun exposure for solar performance, and operational objectives. CPTED principles guide where coverage matters most across the site.
ClearSeek and ISS Analytics
While SCT trailers carry rich onboard analytics, ClearSeek pattern recognition and the ISS SecurOS analytic portfolio extend the visual intelligence across multiple trailer feeds and integrate with surrounding camera networks for cross-site search.
Government Sector Services
SCT deployments at election sites, municipal hot spots, and law enforcement support operations sit within PCA's government sector services. The trailer is one part of a broader engagement that includes procurement, compliance, and operational planning.
AI Governance Advisory
SCT analytics include capabilities such as clothing-color search, thermal detection, and behavioral pattern recognition. For organizations deploying AI-driven surveillance in public-facing environments, PCA's governance advisory aligns programs with ISO/IEC 42001 and the NIST AI RMF for accountability and audit readiness.

Want a deeper look at the operational concept and use cases for SCT?

Read the Deep Dive

Have questions about SCT?

See the FAQ

Review Pricing, Availability, and Deployment Options

Single-site pilot or multi-site program: PCA has preferred inventory access and can configure the right solution for your timeline and budget.

Contact Us
Home/Solutions/SCT/Deep Dive
Long-Form Article

Mobile Solar Surveillance: Coverage Where Permanent Infrastructure Is Not the Answer

When fixed CCTV is the wrong fit, and how solar mobile platforms deliver visibility, deterrence, and intelligence without construction, power runs, or fixed commitment.

Section 1

The Problem: Fixed Surveillance Has Real Limits

Permanent CCTV infrastructure makes sense when the requirement is permanent. The site, the risk profile, and the operational need are all stable. When any of those factors are temporary or shifting, fixed surveillance becomes the wrong tool.

Several scenarios expose the gap. A construction site has changing layouts, valuable materials, and a finite project lifespan. Permanent cameras are overbuilt for the duration. Temporary venues and special events need coverage for days or weeks, not years. Risk hot spots emerge in response to incidents, then move as conditions change. Remote sites and utility yards may need coverage but have no electrical service to support fixed cameras.

The cost barrier is just as real. Trenching, conduit, network drops, and the engineering to put fixed cameras where they need to be can easily exceed the budget for the underlying security need. Many projects end up underprotected because the only available option carries a fixed-infrastructure price tag the project cannot absorb.

The operational gap is the same in every case: the site needs coverage, but the situation does not justify the permanence, cost, or build time of permanent infrastructure.

Section 2

The Operational Concept: Self-Sufficient Mobile Surveillance

SCT solar mobile surveillance trailers are designed for the scenarios where fixed infrastructure does not fit. Each trailer is a self-contained surveillance platform with its own power, cameras, analytics, network connectivity, and active deterrence layer.

Four design choices define how the platform operates.

First, power is self-generated. A high-capacity solar array charges the onboard lithium battery system during daylight hours. The battery sustains the camera system for extended periods, in most environments for days, before requiring additional charge. For regions with limited sunlight or heavy seasonal cloud cover, auxiliary power generation can be added to maintain continuous operation.

Second, deployment is rapid. The trailers tow to the site, deploy on built-in leveling jacks, and raise the camera mast in minutes. No trenching, no network drop, no permits typically required. A site can move from no coverage to operational surveillance in less than a working day.

Third, the platform meets NDAA compliance baseline requirements from the factory. Camera options can be tailored to the project, with standard SCT builds and alternative manufacturers including Axis, Panasonic, Milesight, and Hanwha available based on the operational need.

Fourth, the platform is field-proven. SCT trailers have been deployed at the Las Vegas Strip, downtown Las Vegas, election sites, special events, construction sites, and active law enforcement support operations across the continental United States.

Section 3

Configuration and Capability

The standard SCT build is a multi-camera head unit on a mast that extends over 26 feet when fully deployed. The standard package includes eight cameras: four fixed cameras maintaining constant coverage on priority zones, and four PTZ cameras that can be directed to track movement, assess developing activity, or verify alerts. A dual-lens PTZ option provides a full panoramic view paired with 30x optical zoom for detailed observation at distance.

The platform supports a deep analytics stack:

  • People search by clothing color
  • Vehicle identification by color and type
  • License plate recognition with alerting
  • Thermal signature tracking
  • Line crossing, intrusion, and loitering detection
  • Custom event search by time, object, or alert type

Active deterrence is built in: visible lighting and audio warnings can be triggered to discourage unwanted activity. Anti-tampering alerts and built-in GPS tracking protect the trailer itself.

Network connectivity uses 4G LTE as standard, with secure point-to-point, WiFi, or satellite options available based on site conditions. Edge recording preserves footage locally even if network connectivity is interrupted.

Section 4

Operating Models and Integration

SCT platforms are available under multiple operating models so the client picks the structure that fits the project rather than fitting the project to a structure.

Rental is the most common option. A fixed monthly rate covers the platform, warranty, and standard repair where damage is not caused by intentional acts or negligence. Delivery, setup, and removal are not included in the monthly lease. They are billed separately and quoted based on the site location and scope of the deployment.

Purchase is available when the client wants to own the asset. Special events and time-sensitive projects can be supported with advance scheduling.

The platforms are delivered without live monitoring by default, so the client chooses how they operate the system. Options include sharing external video streams with the client's existing VMS or security platform, granting direct dashboard or mobile app access to internal staff for local monitoring, or engaging remote live agent monitoring through PCA on request.

Section 5

Where SCT Fits and PCA's Role

SCT platforms are appropriate for:

  • Special events and temporary venues
  • Construction and laydown yards
  • Parking areas and most garages with sufficient clearance
  • Remote facilities and utility sites
  • Short-term risk hot spots
  • Long-term sites where traditional CCTV is not cost-effective or feasible

PCA's role on every SCT engagement covers more than equipment delivery. The work includes CPTED-based planning, security and risk assessments, and placement reviews that account for sight lines, lighting conditions, sun exposure for solar performance, and operational objectives. PCA designs the deployment so the platform becomes part of the overall security posture rather than a standalone unit on the site. For multi-site programs, PCA coordinates configuration, scheduling, and integration across all locations so the program operates as a single capability.

Discuss a Pilot, Multi-Site Program, or Configuration Review

Contact PCA to discuss SCT mobile surveillance deployment for your site or program.

Contact Us
Home/Services/Assessments
Security Assessments & CPTED

Every Technology Recommendation Starts With Understanding the Problem

PCA's security assessments and CPTED-based site evaluations are the foundation of every engagement. No equipment is recommended and no deployment plan is designed until we understand your environment, risk profile, and operational realities.

Our Approach

Site Hardening Is One Piece. We Look at the Whole Picture.

Relying solely on site hardening can sometimes be counterproductive. PCA approaches site security as a blend of thoughtful design, lighting, surveillance, human behavior, and technology. Not a checklist of barriers.

Our assessments are built on real-world law enforcement and security leadership experience combined with CPTED (Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design) certification. We identify what is working, what is not, and what represents a gap that a specific technology, design change, or procedural adjustment can close.

  • Thorough evaluation of physical site, access points, sight lines, and lighting
  • Review of existing security procedures, staffing, and technology
  • CPTED analysis covering natural surveillance, natural access control, and territorial reinforcement
  • Threat and risk assessment tied to your specific industry and environment
  • Technology gap analysis with specific recommendations
  • Written deliverable suitable for leadership decision-making
Assessment Types
  • Full site security assessments for corporate campuses, facilities, and properties
  • CPTED reviews for new construction and renovation planning
  • Event security assessments for large-scale temporary deployments
  • Camera system and technology audits for existing infrastructure
  • Expert reviews for failure-to-act and use-of-force case evaluation
  • Post-incident site reviews to identify gaps that contributed to an event
Expert Testimony

PCA principals have extensive experience in both state and federal courts. In scenarios where legal proceedings are involved, expert witness testimony is available from investigators experienced in presenting clear, concise findings to a judge or jury.

Start With an Assessment

Contact PCA to discuss your site, your concerns, and what an assessment engagement looks like for your organization.

Request an Assessment
Home/Services/Investigative Support
Investigative Support

Program Design, SOPs, and Training for Internal Investigative Capability

PCA does not conduct investigations directly. PCA designs the investigative capability that organizations need to handle inquiries internally with consistency, defensibility, and discretion. The work covers program design, Standard Operating Procedure development, methodology training, oversight guidance, and expert witness testimony, drawn from decades of practitioner experience across corporate, federal, and law enforcement investigative environments.

What PCA's Advisory Covers

Full Range of Investigative Scenarios Organizations Face

PCA's investigative program advisory designs the methodology, procedures, and oversight that organizations need to handle their own investigative work with confidence.

  • Regulatory compliance investigations: program design and SOP development
  • Intellectual property and trade secret investigations: methodology and process design
  • Workplace incident investigations covering harassment, discrimination, and safety violations: framework design, intake procedures, and documentation standards
  • Internal corporate inquiries requiring discretion at all levels: protocol design and chain-of-custody procedures
  • Complex external cases including multi-jurisdictional matters: coordination structure and escalation protocols
Expert Witness Services

PCA principals have testified in state and federal courts and are available as expert witnesses in security, law enforcement practice, and investigative methodology cases.

  • Interview services: $275/hour, two-hour minimum
  • Transcription: pass-through cost
  • Case preparation: $275/hour, 30-minute increments
Approach

Every advisory engagement is approached with the discretion and precision drawn from active practitioner experience. The goal is not to hand the organization a procedure manual. It is to build internal investigative capability that produces consistent process, sound methodology, and credible documentation supporting actionable, defensible findings.

Advisory Support Available

PCA also provides advisory guidance on fraud prevention program design, background screening program structure, and pre-employment due diligence. PCA does not conduct background check work directly. The advisory engagement designs and supports the programs that do.

Discuss Your Investigative Capability Needs Confidentially

Initial consultations are handled with full discretion. Contact us to describe your situation and learn how PCA's advisory engagement can build internal investigative capability tailored to your organization.

Contact Us Confidentially
Home/Services/Compliance
Compliance, Ethics & Regulatory

Protecting Your Organization Through Programs That Integrate, Not Just Comply

PCA designs compliance, ethics, and regulatory programs that become part of how your organization operates, not a separate audit function that exists on paper.

What We Build

Programs Designed for the Long Term, Not the Next Audit

Central to protecting your organization from various risks is a program that brings compliance, ethics, and regulatory requirements together, not as separate silos.

  • Code of Conduct and Ethics policy development
  • Regulatory compliance program design and implementation
  • Gap assessments against applicable federal and state requirements
  • Federal government contractor compliance, with extensive experience serving commercial providers to the US federal government
  • Internal audit and controls program development
  • Compliance monitoring and reporting structure design
  • Training program development for employee groups
  • ISO 9001:2015 quality management system alignment
  • ISO 42001 AI management system advisory
Who Needs This
  • Government contractors requiring ethics and compliance program documentation
  • Healthcare, finance, and regulated industries facing audit exposure
  • Organizations onboarding new technology (including AI systems) that creates regulatory questions
  • Companies navigating OSHA compliance and workers' safety requirements
  • Organizations that have experienced a compliance event and need a rebuild
AI Governance Advisory

PCA offers dedicated AI governance advisory through our specialized practice at ai-governance.thepcadvisors.com, covering ISO 42001 implementation, AI policy development, and governance program design.

Build a Program That Holds Up

Contact PCA to discuss your compliance environment, current gaps, and what a program design engagement looks like.

Start the Conversation
Home/Services/Government Relations
Government Relations & Advocacy

Governmental Liaison, Regulatory Navigation, and Nevada Lobbying

PCA acts as a bridge between your organization and regulatory bodies, simplifying government interactions, advocating for your interests, and providing direct lobbying representation within the State of Nevada on public safety and security matters.

What We Do

Regulatory Complexity Is a Constant. Having the Right Partner Makes It Manageable.

Our team is skilled in government relations and advocates for your interests across regulatory discussions, licensing proceedings, policy development, and legislative processes at the state and local level.

  • Regulatory liaison services connecting your organization with the right decision-makers
  • State of Nevada lobbying on public safety, security technology, and related legislative matters
  • Representation in regulatory proceedings and licensing matters
  • Policy development and submission support
  • Municipal and government agency engagement for pilot programs and procurement
  • Legislative tracking and advocacy strategy development
Active Initiatives

PCA is currently engaged in Nevada legislative efforts through the SCR3 human trafficking initiative, and in regulatory policy work related to UAS (drone) operations and indoor UAS endorsement policies under Nevada licensing regulations.

This active engagement gives PCA direct, current experience with Nevada's regulatory and legislative environment that we can bring to bear for clients with specific policy or government relations needs.

Discuss Your Government Relations Need

Whether you are navigating a specific regulatory matter or building a long-term government engagement strategy, contact PCA to discuss how we can help.

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Nevada SCR3 Initiative

Building a Better Response to Human Trafficking in Nevada

Nevada remains one of the hardest-hit states for human trafficking per capita. The current approach is not working. SCR3 is the turning point: a chance to build a system that delivers real care, real oversight, and real results.

Why This Work

Prosecution Alone Is Not the Answer. The Full Range of Survivor Needs Must Be Addressed.

Despite task forces, legislation, training, and grant programs, Nevada continues to rank among the highest per capita for trafficking cases in the country. It is time to stop tweaking a broken playbook and write a new one.

This effort is personal. Early in a law enforcement career that included federal investigations into international trafficking rings and homicide cases involving sexual assault and domestic violence, a hard lesson emerged after a conviction in a brutal sex assault case: we secured multiple life sentences, but after the conviction, the victim took her own life. That case changed everything. Prosecution alone is not the answer.

SCR3 (Senate Concurrent Resolution 3) passed in June 2025 with bipartisan support. It tasks Nevada's Interim Judiciary Committee with a formal study of the State's trafficking response. This initiative leads that effort.

What SCR3 Will Accomplish
  • Full review of the Nevada Human Trafficking Coalition and why it stalled
  • Identification of legal and victim service gaps
  • Mandatory reporting improvement proposals
  • Leveraging domestic violence and sexual assault program structures
  • Building a public-private advisory board with clear oversight and accountability
  • Designing sustainable financial models to reduce dependency on private funding over time
Current Status

MOUs are being developed, partner engagement is underway, and academic research planning is set to launch while waiting for the Interim Committee of the Judiciary to be seated. This is a 2025 through 2027 initiative.

How You Can Help

This Effort Needs More Than Legislation

Some of the needed corrections do not require a legislative process. They require people willing to help build a better system.

Funding Partners

Support ongoing planning, research, and partner engagement while the State builds toward self-sustaining funding mechanisms.

Advisory Board

Professionals and organizations willing to participate in shaping the structure and priorities of the reformed coalition.

Survivors & Advocates

Lived experience is essential to ensuring priorities reflect what survivors actually need before, during, and after the legal process.

Law Enforcement & Legal Allies

Agencies and practitioners interested in replicating this model in other states facing the same structural challenges.

Join This Growing Coalition

To learn more, offer support, or participate in this initiative, reach out. Together, we are stronger.

Contact Us
Home/Resources
Resource

Understanding AI in Security and Law Enforcement

What AI can actually do for security operations today, what it cannot, and the questions to ask before any technology purchase.

Section 1

AI in Security Is Not One Technology

The term "AI" covers a wide range of capabilities, each at a different stage of maturity. Treating them as a single category leads to bad procurement decisions and worse operational outcomes. Five characteristics define how AI shows up in security.

Maturity. Technologies range from well-established systems with proven results to capabilities still in active development. Facial recognition has been deployed in production for over a decade in some applications, while predictive policing algorithms remain experimental and contested.

Application diversity. AI in security covers tasks as simple as scanning surveillance footage for known faces and as complex as real-time decision support during critical incidents. Each application requires a different capability set and a different level of human oversight.

Integration complexity. Adding AI to existing security infrastructure can range from a simple plug-in into a surveillance system that already supports it, to a multi-year program involving new cameras, new servers, new operator workflows, and significant staff training.

Ethics and privacy. AI in security touches privacy, civil liberties, and legal compliance directly. Every deployment requires weighing the security benefit against impact on individual rights, regulatory requirements, and public trust.

Continuous change. AI capabilities advance quickly. A leading-edge solution today may be surpassed by something cheaper or more accurate within 18 to 24 months. Procurement decisions need to account for that pace.

Section 2

The Reality Behind the AI Hype

The market emphasizes the most advanced features of AI technology, which can create unrealistic expectations of what these systems deliver in actual deployments.

Current capabilities are genuinely impressive in specific domains. AI can analyze hours of surveillance footage in minutes, flag known faces in crowds, identify specific objects or behaviors in real time, and apply consistent analysis across data volumes no human team could process. Where AI excels, it dramatically extends operational reach.

Limitations are equally real. AI lacks the kind of judgment that comes from human experience. A system may identify a person carrying an object that looks like a firearm but cannot assess the likelihood of actual threat the way a trained security professional can. Pattern recognition is strong, intent inference is weak.

Real-world performance often differs from lab performance. Facial recognition that performs near-perfectly under ideal lighting and angles in a controlled environment can be substantially less accurate in a crowded, poorly lit train station. The gap between vendor demonstrations and operational results is where many AI deployments fail to meet expectations.

Section 3

Ethical and Legal Considerations

AI deployments in security operate inside a legal and ethical environment that has not finished forming. Six considerations need to be evaluated before any deployment.

Data privacy and consent. AI systems require large amounts of data, often including personal information. The European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) imposes strict rules on data processing and mandates clear consent. Non-compliance carries significant penalties. United States privacy law is more fragmented but moving in the same direction.

Bias and discrimination. AI algorithms can perpetuate or amplify biases in their training data. A National Institute of Standards and Technology study found that many facial recognition systems have higher error rates for people of color, which raises legitimate concerns about disparate impact in law enforcement use.

Surveillance and civil liberties. AI-powered surveillance can shift the balance between security and individual rights. Cities including London and Beijing have generated public debate about how much AI surveillance is appropriate and under what oversight.

Transparency and accountability. AI systems can be complex and opaque, which raises accountability concerns when AI is used in high-stakes decisions. The COMPAS risk assessment tool used in some United States criminal justice settings has been criticized for limited transparency in how its outputs are generated.

Compliance with legal standards. Predictive policing tools must align with due process and equal protection requirements to avoid legal challenges and public backlash.

Ethical use and public trust. San Francisco's ban on facial recognition use by city agencies reflects public concerns about ethical implications and potential abuse. Public trust is hard to rebuild once lost.

Each of these is a real-world example from the past decade. They illustrate the legal, ethical, and practical questions any AI deployment needs to address before it begins, not after.

Section 4

AI in Video Surveillance

The video surveillance space has seen the most operational deployment of AI in security. Five applications have moved from concept to production.

Weapon detection. AI algorithms capable of identifying concealed weapons have been deployed at airports and other access points to support manual screening and reduce friction in passenger flow.

People detection and behavior analysis. Advanced systems can distinguish individuals in crowded environments, identify unusual behavior patterns, and flag potential incidents in shopping malls, sports venues, and transit hubs.

Crowd monitoring. AI can analyze crowd density, flow, and movement to predict and prevent stampedes, bottlenecks, and disturbances at large gatherings.

Pattern recognition. Identifying suspicious behaviors or unattended items in public spaces supports preemptive security actions and faster response.

License plate recognition. LPR is among the most mature AI applications, used in traffic management, law enforcement vehicle identification, and access control across thousands of installations.

Section 5

Integrating AI in Security Operations

A methodical integration approach is the difference between an AI deployment that delivers operational value and one that becomes shelfware. PCA's integration approach covers six stages.

Assessment. The first stage evaluates current security infrastructure, identifies the operational gaps where AI can deliver value, and reviews staff skill levels, existing technology, and the specific risks the organization faces.

Solution design. The right AI tools are selected based on the assessment. The selection matches the tool to the operational requirement, not the other way around.

Integration and implementation. AI systems are deployed with attention to existing infrastructure compatibility. The work covers new hardware where needed, server provisioning for data processing, and software integration with current security management systems.

Training and capacity building. Staff are trained to use the new tools, interpret AI analysis correctly, and respond to alerts appropriately. The goal is operational fluency, not vendor demos.

Testing and optimization. Once deployed, the system is tested across realistic security scenarios. Accuracy and responsiveness are evaluated, and the configuration is tuned for the actual deployment environment.

Ongoing support. AI systems require continuous updates, refinement, and maintenance as threats change and as the technology itself advances. The relationship with PCA does not end at implementation.

Section 6

PCA's Role in AI Evaluation

PCA's role is to evaluate AI technology against the specific operational requirements of the client, recommend solutions that produce measurable value, and integrate those solutions into a working security operation. The approach is vendor-agnostic for most advisory engagements. PCA is not paid by the vendors whose products are evaluated, which means the recommendation is determined by fit rather than by commercial relationship.

Discuss AI Evaluation for Your Operations

Contact PCA to discuss how AI technology can be evaluated, selected, and integrated into your security operations.

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Resource

Augmented Intelligence and Your Business

Why the productive question is not whether AI will replace humans, but how to design systems where machines and humans amplify each other.

Section 1

The Limits of Traditional Surveillance and Pure AI

Two common operational setups demonstrate why neither pure human work nor pure AI is the right model.

In traditional video surveillance, human security personnel monitor multiple screens for hours. The arrangement assumes the operator can watch every feed continuously, identify anomalies, and respond appropriately. The arrangement fails in practice. Operator fatigue is a documented problem, attention drift increases with the number of screens, and the monotony of the task reduces accuracy over time. The tool meant to improve security creates its own bottleneck.

Pure AI deployments operate at the opposite pole. AI systems can analyze enormous data volumes at speeds no human can match. In medical diagnostics, financial market analysis, and predictive maintenance for manufacturing, that capacity creates real value. The limit shows up at the edges of pattern recognition. AI lacks the situational judgment that comes from human experience. It can predict from historical data but cannot reliably interpret subtleties of behavior, cultural difference, or ethical weight in a decision. When the decision touches a person's rights, freedom, or wellbeing, the absence of that judgment becomes the operational risk.

The space between these two extremes is where most security and business decisions actually happen. That is the space augmented intelligence is designed to occupy.

Section 2

What Augmented Intelligence Actually Is

Augmented intelligence is a deliberate design choice. Rather than treating AI as a replacement for human effort, augmented intelligence treats AI as a tool that amplifies human capability. The goal is faster, more accurate human decisions, not fewer humans in the loop.

Three operational principles define the model.

AI handles volume and pattern. The system processes data at machine speed, identifies the items that may require attention, and surfaces them to a human reviewer with the relevant supporting information.

Humans handle judgment. The reviewer makes the actual decision: act, escalate, dismiss, or investigate further. The human retains ownership of the consequence.

The system learns from the decisions. Each decision a human makes becomes training feedback that improves the system's future surfacing. Over time, the system becomes a better filter without removing the human from the call.

Augmented intelligence is the recognition that some tasks favor machines, others favor humans, and the productive design is to give each what it does best.

Section 3

Surveillance as a Case Study

The clearest application of augmented intelligence is in operational video surveillance. The shift from pure human monitoring to augmented intelligence changes how the work is done.

The AI layer monitors all video feeds simultaneously, applies advanced algorithms to identify potential security incidents, unusual activity, or behavioral patterns of concern, and prioritizes what gets flagged by severity and urgency.

The human layer reviews flagged incidents with the supporting visual evidence in front of them, makes the decision about response, and dispatches the appropriate action.

This is not the AI making autonomous decisions about people. The AI sifts the noise to highlight what matters. The human keeps decision authority where it belongs.

The result is a surveillance operation that is consistently attentive, responsive across all the feeds at once, and faster to flag genuine issues. Critically, the human does not disappear from the operation. The human's role becomes more focused and more impactful.

Section 4

Real Risks From Unmitigated AI Deployments

The argument for augmented intelligence is not theoretical. Pure-AI deployments that removed human judgment have produced concrete harm.

Civil litigation has targeted large medical insurers for AI-driven claims decisions that allegedly denied coverage at scale without sufficient human review. The Federal Trade Commission has taken enforcement action and imposed financial penalties on a large retailer for misuse of facial recognition technology. Multiple jurisdictions have passed restrictions on government use of facial recognition specifically because the technology produced biased or unreliable outcomes when deployed without sufficient oversight.

These are not edge cases. They are the predictable result of pure-AI deployment in environments where the consequence of a wrong answer is significant. Augmented intelligence is the design pattern that prevents that class of failure. The AI still does the heavy analytical work, but a trained human is in the loop on every consequential decision.

Section 5

The Path Forward

Augmented intelligence is not a single product. It is a design approach that applies across security operations, business operations, and any domain where human decisions need to scale beyond what manual effort can support.

Three things matter when implementing augmented intelligence in any organization.

The decision must be defined. Before any tool is selected, the specific decision being supported needs to be named: what is the AI helping us decide, who is the human reviewer, and what does success look like for that decision.

The human role must be respected. The reviewer is not a rubber stamp. The role is to apply judgment, override the AI when appropriate, and own the outcome. Tools that make it hard for humans to override AI recommendations create the exact accountability gap augmented intelligence is supposed to prevent.

Oversight has to be built in. Periodic audit of AI outputs, the human overrides, and the downstream outcomes is how the system improves over time. Without that audit, drift accumulates and the operational benefit erodes.

Section 6

PCA's Role

PCA designs and implements augmented intelligence approaches across security operations, investigative work, and broader business operations. The work covers the assessment of where augmented intelligence delivers measurable value, the selection of tools that match the specific decision-support requirement, the integration with existing operational systems, training for the human operators who are now in a more focused role, and ongoing evaluation to confirm the system continues delivering the intended outcomes.

For organizations building AI governance programs that align with ISO/IEC 42001 or the NIST AI Risk Management Framework, PCA's AI Governance Advisory practice provides the program design, policy work, and oversight structures that make augmented intelligence deployments accountable and durable.

Discuss an Augmented Intelligence Approach for Your Operations

Contact PCA to discuss how augmented intelligence can be designed into your security or business operations.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the most common questions about PCA, how we work, and our technology portfolio.

General
PCA delivers consulting services across three primary areas: advisory work, technology solutions, and investigative support. Advisory covers security assessments and CPTED, compliance program design across ethics, regulatory, and quality management standards, government relations and Nevada lobbying, OSHA compliance, and AI governance built around ISO/IEC 42001 and the NIST AI Risk Management Framework. Technology solutions in the PCA portfolio include ClearSeek pattern recognition, iDFR indoor drone response, UVSS under-vehicle scanning, Soffit pedestrian safety lighting, SCT mobile surveillance, and Dark Watch real-time risk screening. Investigative support covers internal corporate investigation guidance, expert witness review, and procedure design. The Solutions and Services menus on the site break each area down in detail.
PCA serves organizations of all sizes across corporate, hospitality, government, municipal, law enforcement, and education sectors. There is no minimum organization size. We serve any entity that has a security, risk, compliance, or investigative need that falls within our areas of expertise.
PCA combines law enforcement, regulatory, and technology experience with business consulting, which produces solutions built for real operational environments rather than theory. Every engagement is custom-built around the client's specific objectives, with strict standards for ethics, compliance, and quality applied throughout the work. All experts and strategic partners brought into a project are verified and vetted. Each client is assigned a dedicated PCA lead who acts as the single point of contact for the engagement, which keeps communication and accountability clear from start to finish.
It means that PCA does not make technology recommendations before understanding the specific problem, site, and operational environment of each client. A site visit and needs evaluation precede any proposal. This protects clients from deploying solutions that do not fit their environment, and it ensures that whatever is recommended has a clear operational purpose tied to a documented gap or risk.
Both, depending on the engagement. For technology solutions in PCA's portfolio, including SCT mobile surveillance trailers, UVSS, Soffit, iDFR, and ClearSeek, PCA can manage the full deployment including procurement, installation coordination, and training. For broader advisory engagements such as security assessments, compliance programs, and government relations, PCA serves in a consulting capacity. Many engagements involve both elements.
PCA advises on, trains for, and supports investigations rather than directly conducting them. The advisory engagements cover the full range of investigative needs organizations face: internal corporate investigations, fraud and embezzlement matters, background and suitability reviews, intellectual property and trade secret investigations, workplace incident reviews including harassment and safety violations, and regulatory compliance investigations. In legal matters, PCA provides expert testimony and case review support related to law enforcement, security, and OSHA issues.
PCA evaluates each client's existing security operations, identifies areas where technology can add predictive value or operational efficiency, and recommends solutions that integrate with the infrastructure already in place. The emphasis is on responsible deployment, transparency in how the technology operates, and ongoing oversight, so the tools selected reduce risk rather than create new exposures. The AI Governance Advisory practice anchors this work in the ISO/IEC 42001 standard and the NIST AI Risk Management Framework.
PCA provides OSHA compliance program design, training delivery, risk management, and representation support when OSHA complaints arise. This service is available upon request and is not PCA's primary focus area, but it complements broader workplace safety and risk management engagements where OSHA compliance is one component of the work.
Yes. PCA holds Nevada Private Investigators Licensing Board (PILB) License #2916. The firm is also accredited by the Better Business Bureau and is a member of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), ASIS International, Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals (HFTP), the Urban Chamber of Commerce, Made in Nevada, and serves on the UNLV MIS Advisory Board.
Yes. PCA's operations span the continental United States, and select international engagements are supported through PCA's network of professionals and subject matter experts. Technology deployments through SCT partner units are available across the continental US, with Alaska and Hawaii supported with advance planning.
Dark Watch is a real-time risk and compliance screening platform that operates via API at $1 per search with no SSN storage. It flags across threat confidence, recency, type, and country of origin. This is distinct from a traditional background check, which is a point-in-time review of historical records. Dark Watch provides a continuous or on-demand risk screening capability appropriate for access decisions, vendor vetting, and ongoing compliance monitoring. A no-cost file review proof of concept is available.
The Early Access Program is a limited pilot initiative for a small number of remote guarding firms, security guard companies, and SOC-driven organizations interested in testing the Brecourt CQD indoor drone system in a real operational environment. Participants provide real-world feedback that shapes system development and receive early access to a capability that is still in active development. Reach out directly to discuss eligibility and what participation involves.
Yes. Ongoing support, audits, updates, and monitoring are available as part of most engagements, and are recommended for compliance programs, security deployments, and integrated technology systems where conditions change over time. The specific scope and structure of post-delivery support are defined in the engagement agreement.
The first step is a direct conversation. Email [email protected] or call 725-260-3101 and describe your situation, your concern, or the specific need you are trying to address. PCA operates by appointment and will respond promptly to schedule an initial consultation.
Under Vehicle Scanning
The UVSS is a ground-level imaging system that inspects vehicle undersides for threats, contraband, or unauthorized modifications during entry or exit at secure locations. It can be deployed in a permanent location or semi-permanently. A mobile version that is easily deployed is in late-stage development and will be available shortly.
Vehicles pass over a recessed or surface-mounted camera array that records high-resolution images. The system stitches these images into a complete undercarriage view for operator inspection and automated analysis.
The UVSS significantly reduces the risk of human error, increases inspection speed, and ensures every vehicle is documented with a clear, consistent visual record. Automation allows near real-time analysis, reducing congestion at entry points without compromising security. From a safety standpoint, personnel never need to approach or position themselves beneath a vehicle. Operators remain at a safe distance while the system captures and analyzes detailed undercarriage imagery through the command interface. Beyond detection of anomalies such as foreign objects, mechanical alterations, or concealment attempts, the system also records the license plate and links it to the corresponding undercarriage image. Each scan is stored and time-stamped, allowing the system to compare returning vehicles against previous inspections to identify new or missing components that could signal tampering. This data-driven comparison capability improves both the accuracy and depth of every inspection and creates a traceable history that supports investigations, compliance audits, and long-term risk management.
Yes. The system is designed for 24/7 outdoor operation. It uses infrared illumination and hardened weatherproof enclosures to maintain consistent image quality in low light, rain, and other adverse conditions.
Yes. The UVSS archives each scan and can compare current images against prior records to identify modifications, new components, damage, or concealed items that were not present on a previous visit. This capability is particularly valuable for facilities with recurring vehicle access by the same individuals or fleets.
The scan occurs in real time as the vehicle passes over the camera array. Full imaging and analysis are completed within seconds, allowing traffic to continue with minimal delay at the access point.
Yes. The system integrates with license plate recognition, gate controls, access control systems, and broader surveillance networks to provide complete vehicle security management at an access point. PCA manages the integration planning as part of every deployment engagement.
Government facilities, border crossings, seaports, stadiums, large events, corporate campuses, energy infrastructure, and any private site with controlled vehicle access all benefit from this system. Anywhere that vehicle-borne threats represent a credible risk, or where documentation of vehicle access is required for compliance or liability purposes, UVSS adds meaningful value.
Yes. The system archives scans for future comparison and investigation. All data handling follows strict privacy and security standards. Retention policies are customizable to match your organization's compliance requirements and legal obligations.
PCA manages every stage of implementation including system setup, calibration, operator training, and ongoing maintenance planning. We develop the standard operating procedures and policies that govern daily use, data handling, and safety protocols. When needed, we design and deliver hands-on training and testing programs to verify operator competency and ensure the system is being used to its full capability in accordance with your operational standards.
Pattern Recognition and Analytics
Analytics platforms apply a model to live and recorded video to identify activity, patterns, and potential threats in real time. Different platforms use different approaches: some rely on machine learning, some on object recognition, and others such as ClearSeek use deterministic pattern analysis instead of either method. The end result is the same. Video becomes usable intelligence that supports proactive monitoring, faster decisions, and stronger security operations.
Available capabilities include object detection, behavioral and weapon recognition, detection of fighting or running, vehicle and people tracking, license plate reading, perimeter intrusion alerts, accident and slip detection, wrong-way movement alerts, and custom rules built for specific operational needs. Selection depends on the use case, the procedures and policies governing implementation, and the physical environment where the platform will be deployed. PCA's role is to define those parameters with the client and match each analytic to its intended outcome so the deployment delivers measurable value.
In most cases, yes. The analytics platforms PCA deploys are hardware agnostic and integrate with the majority of existing CCTV and VMS systems, which allows clients to strengthen current infrastructure instead of replacing it. Some platforms may require software updates or additional components to reach full integration. Many of these platforms also run on mobile surveillance trailers and drones, which extends coverage from fixed locations to moving or temporary environments.
It depends on the platform and how it is deployed. The technology can operate locally on a secure internal network or be cloud-enabled for remote access and monitoring. Both configurations meet strict cybersecurity and data protection standards. ClearSeek and several other platforms PCA works with operate without any internet connection at all. Each deployment is matched to the client's operational requirements, budget, and environment, with on-premises operation supported wherever data control or air-gap operation is required.
Accuracy depends on many factors including lighting, camera placement, detection zone configuration, resolution, frame rate, and environmental conditions such as weather, crowd density, and movement speed. Each of these affects how reliably the platform classifies objects or behavior. The analytics platforms PCA deploys are trained on large and varied datasets that account for differences in lighting, distance, and viewing angle. They are validated through live field testing rather than controlled lab evaluation, which is how consistent performance in actual operational environments is verified. Every element that affects accuracy is tuned at deployment: camera positioning, calibration, detection zones, system parameters, confidence thresholds, and analytic rules built around the mission. That mission might be identifying vehicles in low light, tracking individuals in crowded spaces, or recognizing patterns associated with specific threats. The objective is precision, consistency, and reliable performance even in complex, high-activity environments.
Yes. The analytics engines PCA deploys can identify prolonged presence, crowd formation, directional movement, unattended baggage, and behavioral changes that indicate risk, with alerts sent to operators for rapid response.
Facial recognition is supported, but only when explicitly authorized by the client. The standard configurations PCA deploys are privacy-preserving and do not collect biometric data.
Law enforcement, military operations, casinos, transportation hubs, education, logistics, and private facilities use the analytics platforms PCA deploys for stronger situational awareness.
Alerts appear in near real time on the command dashboard, route to mobile devices, or feed directly into existing alarm and dispatch systems at the client site.
Yes. PCA provides full training for operators and administrators, technical support, periodic performance reviews, and ongoing updates as new analytic modules are released.
iDFR
The iDFR system is built around the Close Quarters Drone (CQD), a drone engineered for indoor, GPS-denied environments. The CQD launches in seconds from a fixed docking station, scans for threats, streams real-time intelligence to a security operations center, and can deploy nonlethal countermeasures to slow or disrupt an active threat.
The CQD uses visual-inertial localization, collision avoidance technology, proprietary navigation software, and onboard sensors to maneuver through hallways, stairwells, rooms, and confined spaces with no external beacons or GPS signals required. The CQD is also capable of operating outdoors using GPS when an engagement calls for it.
Deployment occurs after a threat is detected and validated, either through integrated analytics or by manual command. The CQD launches immediately and flies semi-autonomously toward the area of concern, which reduces the personnel required on scene. The drone can be operated from a security operations center located anywhere. Operational testing has been conducted with operators controlling the CQD from positions more than 2,000 miles away from the facility where the drone was flying, with low latency on the control and video feed.
Once airborne, the CQD streams live visual intelligence to the security team, continues threat detection through onboard analytics, accepts manual control or remains in semi-autonomous mode, and can deploy nonlethal countermeasures to slow or deter an aggressor until law enforcement arrives.
The CQD is designed for indoor, high-risk environments including schools, offices, event venues, healthcare facilities, and other enclosed spaces where rapid threat response matters. Beyond active threat response, the CQD investigates alarms, assesses areas before personnel enter, and provides redundancy to fixed CCTV. It performs interior searches in unsafe conditions to locate signs of life, identify fires, detect safety hazards, and give responders situational awareness when seconds matter.
PCA conducts the threat assessment, reviews existing camera and analytics systems, plans the integration with the client's security operations center, and develops the training and standard operating procedures that govern daily use. PCA also leads after-action reviews and system optimization following live deployments and exercises.
A human operator is always in the loop. Operators choose between manual and semi-autonomous modes for any engagement. Fully autonomous operation is in advanced development and testing but is not yet part of the standard deployment configuration.
Today the iDFR acts as a force multiplier. It intervenes in limited, nonlethal ways under human control, providing a situational advantage to security teams until first responders arrive. Fully autonomous reconnaissance features are in active development for future release.
The CQD is optimized for indoor, GPS-denied environments. Complex interiors or spaces with heavy obstacles may require adjustments to navigation and deployment planning. Full autonomy is not yet standard, so operator oversight and trained integration remain essential. The iDFR is not certified for outdoor operations as a default configuration, though the platform is technically capable of outdoor flight and outdoor use is available on a case-by-case basis with proper planning.
Reach out through the contact form or by email. PCA will evaluate the facility and tailor a proof of concept deployment to the environment and security requirements of the site.
Soffit
The Soffit System is an intelligent lighting solution designed to make pedestrians immediately visible to drivers at crosswalks, intersections, and other crossing points where pedestrian risk is elevated. The system uses directional light focused on the pedestrian rather than on the roadway. That focus improves driver awareness of the person crossing, reduces glare, and minimizes light pollution at the surrounding site.
Traditional flashing systems often depend on the pedestrian pressing a button to activate them. That fails when the person forgets, cannot reach the button, or simply does not see it. Strobes can also disorient drivers at night and create confusion at the crossing. The Soffit System detects pedestrians automatically and illuminates the person directly, producing unmistakable visibility without depending on the person crossing to trigger it.
The system increases pedestrian visibility during low light conditions, reduces accident rates at the crossing, and helps prevent driver distraction. Field trials of properly positioned pedestrian illumination have shown measurable improvement in driver reaction time and compliance at crossings.
Sensors monitor a defined detection zone around the crossing. When a person enters that zone, the Soffit lights activate instantly and remain on until the person clears the zone. That keeps the pedestrian fully visible through the entire crossing, not just at the moment of entry.
Yes, when equipped with the optional analytics module. The module captures pedestrian and traffic counts, incident alerts, and trend data for site safety analysis. No personal or biometric information is captured, stored, or transmitted, which keeps the system aligned with privacy standards.
The system adapts to both new and existing crosswalks, intersections, parking structures, and private developments where pedestrian and vehicle paths cross. The design integrates with electrical service or solar infrastructure already on site.
Yes. The system is built for both municipal safety projects and private facilities such as resorts, campuses, and business centers that want to strengthen pedestrian safety. Every installation is tailored to the operational needs of the specific site.
PCA provides oversight from site assessment through installation and acceptance testing. PCA works with licensed electricians and trusted technology partners to confirm proper integration and operation. In many engagements PCA recommends training the client's own facility personnel to a short certification standard so they can perform the physical installation. That option lowers installation cost and builds maintenance capability that stays with the client.
Both. The Soffit System operates on its own at a single crossing, or it can connect to traffic control systems, surveillance networks, and other monitoring platforms when the project calls for that level of integration.
Contact PCA directly through the request form on the website or by email. PCA will evaluate the location, identify the specific risk factors at the site, and arrange a live demonstration or proof of concept tailored to the environment.
SCT
SCT is a mobile, solar-powered surveillance trailer that can be deployed at a site without permanent infrastructure. Each unit is a self-contained surveillance platform with its own power, cameras, analytics, network connectivity, and active deterrence features. SCT trailers operate independently of fixed power and network connections, which makes them appropriate for construction sites, temporary venues, special events, remote facilities, and any location where permanent CCTV is not the right fit.
Power is self-generated. A high-capacity solar array charges the onboard lithium battery system during daylight hours, and the battery sustains the camera system for extended periods, typically several days in most environments, before requiring additional charge. For regions with limited sunlight or heavy seasonal cloud cover, auxiliary power generation can be added to maintain continuous operation. Optional alternative power is also available through a 110V outlet or a generator.
Setup is rapid. The trailer tows to the site, deploys on its built-in leveling jacks, and the camera mast extends to over 26 feet when fully raised. A site can move from no coverage to operational surveillance in less than a working day. No trenching, network drop, or permits are typically required.
The standard SCT build is an eight-camera head unit on a mast that extends over 26 feet. The package includes four fixed cameras maintaining constant coverage on priority zones and four PTZ cameras that can be directed to track movement, assess activity, or verify alerts. A dual-lens PTZ option provides a full panoramic view paired with a 30x optical zoom lens for detailed observation at distance. Alternative camera manufacturers including Axis, Panasonic, Milesight, and Hanwha are available based on the operational need.
The platform supports a deep analytics stack including people search by clothing color, vehicle identification by color and type, license plate recognition with alerting, thermal signature tracking, line crossing detection, intrusion detection, loitering detection, and custom event search by time, object, or alert type. Anti-tampering alerts and remote notifications through analytics are also standard.
Network connectivity uses 4G LTE as standard, with secure point-to-point, WiFi, or satellite options available based on site conditions. Edge recording preserves footage locally on the platform even if network connectivity is interrupted, so video evidence is retained regardless of the network state.
Yes. All trailer configurations offered through PCA use hardware that meets NDAA compliance requirements from the factory. Each unit can be tailored to specific operational needs while maintaining the compliance baseline.
Both. The standard offering is a fixed monthly rental that includes warranty and standard repair where damage is not caused by intentional acts or negligence. Delivery, setup, and removal are not included in the monthly lease. They are billed separately and quoted based on the site location and scope of the deployment. Purchase is available when the client prefers to own the asset. Special events and time-sensitive projects can be supported with advance scheduling.
Not by default. SCT trailers are delivered without live monitoring so the client chooses how the system is operated. Options include sharing external video streams with the client's existing VMS or security platform, granting direct dashboard or mobile app access to internal staff for local monitoring, or engaging remote live agent monitoring through PCA. Remote monitoring can be provided on request, with cost determined by the scope of the monitoring need and the activity realities at the site.
SCT trailers have been deployed at the Las Vegas Strip, downtown Las Vegas, election sites, special events, construction sites, and active law enforcement support operations across the continental United States. The platform is appropriate for special events and temporary venues, construction and laydown yards, parking areas, remote facilities and utility sites, short-term risk hot spots, and long-term sites where traditional CCTV is not cost-effective or feasible.
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Insights

Field Notes from PCA Practice

Real-time updates from Joel Kisner and the Pinnacle Consulting and Advisors team. Industry observations, project work, sector commentary, and conference takeaways straight from our LinkedIn activity.

Latest Activity

Recent Posts from LinkedIn

The most recent posts from PCA's LinkedIn presence appear below, refreshed automatically. For the full archive of posts and the option to follow new updates as they go live, the original LinkedIn profile remains the source of record.

About This Feed

PCA's Insights feed aggregates LinkedIn posts from Joel Kisner and the Pinnacle Consulting and Advisors company page. The content reflects PCA's active sector work: AI governance, security technology deployment, conference engagement, anti-trafficking initiatives, and broader observations on the security and risk industry. The feed is curated to surface professional content only; comments, reactions, and ephemeral posts are filtered out at the source.

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Leadership and Expertise

PCA was built on the principle that real security and risk management expertise is earned in the field, not in a classroom. Every engagement draws from that foundation.

Joel Kisner, Founder and CEO of Pinnacle Consulting and Advisors
Founder & CEO

Joel Kisner

30+ Years in Law Enforcement, Federal Investigations, and Corporate Security Leadership

Joel Kisner founded Pinnacle Consulting & Advisors on a straightforward belief: organizations of every size deserve access to the caliber of security and risk expertise that was previously available only to Fortune 500 corporations. His career makes that promise credible.

Joel spent decades as a detective with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, including assignments with FBI task forces investigating complex multi-jurisdictional cases involving human trafficking, organized crime, and violent offenses. He has investigated international trafficking rings, worked alongside federal prosecutors, and testified as an expert witness in both state and federal courts.

Following his law enforcement career, Joel moved into senior corporate security leadership at one of the largest publicly traded international gaming and hospitality companies in the world, where he oversaw security operations at scale across multiple properties and jurisdictions. That experience gave him a direct understanding of how large organizations make security decisions, where they succeed, and where they leave themselves exposed.

Law Enforcement
  • LVMPD Detective, multiple specialized units
  • FBI Task Force assignments
  • International trafficking investigations
  • Expert witness, state and federal courts
Corporate Security
  • Senior leadership, Fortune-level gaming and hospitality
  • Multi-property security program oversight
  • Technology deployment and governance
  • Regulatory compliance and government liaison
Current Initiatives
  • Lead sponsor and architect of Nevada SCR3, a bipartisan Senate resolution tasking the Interim Judiciary Committee with a formal study of Nevada's human trafficking response
  • Active engagement with LVMPD, Nevada AG's Office, DPS, and DCFS on trafficking prevention and legislative strategy
  • Drafting proposed UAS regulations for Nevada PILB, addressing the gap between FAA Part 107 outdoor operations and unregulated indoor drone deployments
The PCA Network

A Carefully Selected Network of Specialists

PCA does not staff a large permanent team. Every engagement draws from a network of vetted specialists with deep, current credentials in their specific domain. That network spans security operations, compliance and regulatory affairs, financial controls, safety and risk management, and legal and investigative practice.

The key to a successful engagement is not knowing the answer to every question. It is knowing exactly who does, and giving them the context to deliver. That principle has guided PCA since its founding.

  • Every specialist holds current, active licenses in their discipline
  • All network members are fully insured and bound by PCA's Code of Ethics
  • Teams are assembled specifically for each engagement, not assigned generically
  • Network spans security, compliance, financial controls, HR, safety, and legal practice areas
Credentials & Affiliations
  • NV PILB License #2916
  • BBB Accredited Business
  • International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP)
  • ASIS International
  • Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals (HFTP)
  • UNLV MIS Advisory Board Member
  • Urban Chamber of Commerce, Las Vegas
  • Made in Nevada
  • ISO 9001:2015 Compliant Operations
  • DUNS: 117749954
  • CAGE: 91F26
Associate Principals

Deep Expertise in Specific Practice Areas

PCA's associate principals bring specialized depth that extends the firm's capabilities across financial operations, workplace safety, and organizational compliance.

MB

Matthew Bergamo

Financial Operations and Organizational Controls

Matthew brings specialized expertise in operational performance, financial controls, and organizational efficiency. His practice covers the full range of financial and operational audit work, from AR/AP analysis and loss identification through vendor contract review, supply chain management, and ISO and GMP certification readiness. Organizations that engage Matthew get a structured, data-driven review of where money is leaking and a concrete plan to stop it.

Core Capabilities
  • Financial and operational audit to identify revenue loss from time, product, and process gaps
  • AR/AP analysis, forecasting, and payment allocation
  • Contract analysis and vendor negotiation consultation
  • Supply chain efficiency review and mitigation planning
  • Standard Operating Procedure implementation and review
  • Loss prevention, inventory tracking, and FTE guidance
  • ISO and GMP certification implementation, audit preparation, and readiness review
  • Program and project management with compliance and regulatory advisement
  • Documentation management and internal controls design
PW

Paul Wong

Workplace Safety, Risk Management, and HR Compliance

Paul specializes in the operational and regulatory side of workplace safety and human resources compliance. His practice covers workers' compensation program design and administration, OSHA compliance and reporting, safety and risk assessment, and unemployment program management. Organizations that engage Paul get a structured approach to reducing liability exposure and navigating OSHA and DETR regulatory requirements with confidence.

Core Capabilities
  • Workers' compensation program implementation, administration, and civil case review
  • Safety assessment, risk assessment, and management program design
  • Health, safety, and environmental policy and procedure development
  • OSHA compliance, reporting, and regulatory support with OSHA and DETR
  • Unemployment program design and implementation
  • Safety protocol review and implementation
  • Human resources guidance and program design
Extended Network

A Deep Bench of Vetted Subject Matter Experts

Beyond PCA's principals and associate principals, every engagement has access to a long list of vetted subject matter experts assembled specifically for the needs of that project. These are credentialed professionals with active licenses and deep experience in their specific domains, not generalists. They are selected because they are the right person for that situation, not because they are available.

Security and Investigations
  • Physical security operations
  • CPTED site analysis
  • Forensic investigations
  • Law enforcement liaison
Governance and Compliance
  • Regulatory compliance specialists
  • Ethics and conduct program experts
  • Quality management consultants
  • Government and legislative affairs
Technology and Operations
  • Security technology integration
  • Operations and process improvement
  • Financial controls and audit
  • Human resources and organizational design

Follow Joel on LinkedIn

Joel publishes regularly on security, risk management, technology deployment, and Nevada legislative developments. Follow for updates from the field.

Follow on LinkedIn ↗
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Privacy Policy

This policy describes how Pinnacle Consulting & Advisors handles information collected through this website and in the course of business engagements.

Data Collection

This website may collect information you voluntarily provide through contact forms, including your name, email address, phone number, and the nature of your inquiry. This information is used solely to respond to your inquiry and is not sold or shared with third parties for marketing purposes.

Cookies and Analytics

This site may use standard web analytics tools to understand aggregate visitor behavior. No personally identifiable information is used in these analytics without your consent.

Business Engagement Data

Information collected in the course of a client engagement is governed by the terms of any executed engagement agreement, confidentiality agreement, or data processing agreement applicable to that engagement. PCA operates under a detailed internal Security Policy governing the handling of all client data.

Contact

Questions regarding this privacy policy may be directed to [email protected].

Home/Solutions/ClearSeek
Pattern Recognition Intelligence

Advanced Pattern Recognition and Operational Intelligence

ClearSeek is a deterministic pattern recognition engine that searches vast volumes of visual data and delivers actionable results in near real time. Deployed and operationalized by PCA as a core layer in a broader intelligence approach.

The Technology

Deterministic, Not Probabilistic. Matches What Others Miss.

Unlike inference-based systems that make probabilistic guesses, ClearSeek uses a deterministic pattern analysis approach, following a defined, repeatable process to identify objects based on their actual visual structure rather than statistical likelihood.

  • Matches objects even under heavy distortion or cropping
  • Processes partial images and single video frames
  • More accurate across transformed or degraded inputs than machine learning models
  • More efficient and less processor-intensive than neural network systems
  • Supports metadata, overlays, 3D, AR/VR, and XR environments
  • Operates 100% on-premises with no internet connection required, or in cloud and hybrid configurations
Data Sources It Works Across
  • Body-worn cameras
  • Fixed CCTV and surveillance networks
  • Drone and aerial platforms including iDFR
  • Social media content
  • Any video or image repository
Recognition

Named Company of the Year at the North American Human Trafficking Conference in 2024. Advocate Tim Tebow has invested in this work combating exploitation and child trafficking. Headquartered in Washington State, founded 2020.

Applications by Sector

Built for Real Investigative and Security Demands

Security & Public Safety

Rapidly identify suspects, vehicles, or weapons across multi-camera environments. Reconstruct movements and interactions from archived footage. Uncover hidden associations in seconds.

Human Trafficking Investigations

Trace individuals across camera networks and social media content. Build a complete visual investigative picture faster than any manual process can achieve.

Retail & Logistics

Trace shipments and products even when markings change or identifiers are removed. Identify counterfeit goods and misuse of trademarks across digital and physical environments.

Brand Protection

Detect counterfeit goods without relying on RFID, barcodes, or neural networks. ClearSeek identifies products by their actual visual structure.

Medical Imaging

Match and analyze diagnostic images with exceptional precision. The deterministic approach removes statistical uncertainty from image comparison workflows.

Arts, Media & Provenance

Authenticate works, trace provenance, and manage visual archives with image-based intelligence that does not depend on metadata alone.

Demonstrations

See ClearSeek in Action

Near Real-Time Object Matching

Near Real-Time Object Matching: click to watch on YouTube

Integration with Paliscope YOSE

Integration with Paliscope YOSE: click to watch on YouTube

Adversarial Noise Comparison

Adversarial Noise Comparison: click to watch on YouTube

Defense Capabilities Summary

Defense Capabilities Summary: click to watch on YouTube

Watch Full Defense Capabilities Summary ↗
Works Well With

ClearSeek deploys naturally alongside PCA advisory services and other video intelligence platforms.

Investigations
PCA does not conduct investigations directly. PCA's investigative program advisory designs the SOPs, training, and oversight that internal investigators need to apply ClearSeek pattern recognition responsibly across body cameras, fixed CCTV, drone footage, and social media.
Human Trafficking Initiatives
ClearSeek was named Company of the Year at the 2024 North American Human Trafficking Conference, and Tim Tebow has invested in DejaVuAI® Inc. to advance child trafficking and exploitation prevention work. PCA actively applies ClearSeek to anti-trafficking work.
AI Governance Advisory
Deploying deterministic pattern recognition across law enforcement, enterprise security, or investigative contexts requires governance scaffolding. PCA aligns ClearSeek deployments with ISO/IEC 42001 and the NIST AI RMF to keep automated decisions accountable and reviewable.
ISS SecurOS Integration
ClearSeek operates independently or alongside other video intelligence platforms, including the ISS SecurOS analytic portfolio. The deterministic pattern recognition approach is complementary to the AI-driven analytics in SecurOS, giving customers both classification and reproducible visual search.

Want a deeper look at the operational concept and use cases for ClearSeek?

Read the Deep Dive

Have questions about ClearSeek?

See the FAQ

See a Proof of Concept Designed for Your Mission

Contact PCA to explore a tailored demonstration or proof-of-concept deployment for your investigative or security environment.

Contact Us

ClearSeek™ is a product of DejaVuAI® Inc.

Home/Solutions/ClearSeek/Deep Dive
Long-Form Article

Deterministic Pattern Recognition: A Different Approach to Visual Intelligence

How ClearSeek finds what other systems miss across the flood of visual data that surrounds modern investigations, surveillance, and risk operations.

Section 1

The Problem: Visual Data Has Outpaced Manual Review

The volume of visual content available to investigators, security teams, and analysts has grown faster than any organization's capacity to review it. Body-worn cameras, fixed CCTV networks, drone footage, public surveillance feeds, retail security systems, social media content, and personal device captures all produce visual evidence at rates that no analyst, however skilled, can keep up with.

The traditional response has been to apply machine learning models that classify and search images at scale. These tools are powerful, but they share a structural limitation: they are probabilistic. They produce a confidence score that an object or person in one image matches an object or person in another. Confidence scores work when the source image is clean, the conditions are well-lit, and the target has not been altered. They start to fail when images are cropped, partially obscured, lit poorly, or transformed in any way that changes the statistical signature the model was trained on.

Object recognition models have a parallel issue. They identify what objects exist in an image, but they cannot reliably match a specific instance of an object across different conditions. A car is a car. A specific car is harder.

The result is a category of investigation that requires visual matching at scale, but where the available tools either produce too many false positives, miss matches the analyst would have caught visually, or both.

Section 2

The Operational Concept: Deterministic Pattern Analysis

ClearSeek takes a different approach. Rather than producing probabilistic confidence scores, ClearSeek applies a deterministic pattern recognition process. It follows a defined, repeatable analysis path that identifies objects based on their actual visual structure rather than the statistical likelihood that an unknown image matches a training dataset.

Several characteristics define the approach.

Matching tolerates distortion. ClearSeek identifies objects even when the image has been cropped, partially obscured, lit poorly, or visually transformed. The matching does not depend on the image being clean enough to fit a trained classifier.

Partial inputs are sufficient. ClearSeek can work with single video frames, fragments of images, and content embedded in metadata, overlays, three-dimensional rendering, augmented reality, or extended reality environments.

Tagging is not required. ClearSeek identifies products and objects without RFID, barcodes, or neural networks. The matching is on the visual structure itself, not on an external identifier or tag.

Processor demand is lower. The deterministic approach is more efficient than many machine learning systems running on similar hardware, which means ClearSeek can deploy on local infrastructure without the heavy compute footprint that probabilistic models require at scale.

The result is a search and matching capability that finds what other systems miss, with reproducible results.

Section 3

Investigative Applications

The operational value of ClearSeek shows up most clearly in investigative work. Within an operational deployment, key identifiers from any image, including clothing, tattoos, vehicles, equipment, or landmarks, become searchable across both live and archived material. Investigators can:

  • Track individuals across multiple camera networks at a single facility or across multiple facilities
  • Reconstruct movements and interactions over time using fragmentary visual evidence
  • Correlate disparate data points across body cameras, fixed CCTV, drone footage, and social media
  • Uncover hidden associations between people, vehicles, and locations in seconds rather than weeks
  • Match returned products, shipped goods, or recovered items against earlier captures even when markings have changed or been removed

What used to require hours of manual frame-by-frame review compresses into a search query. The investigation moves faster, the evidence chain is documented, and connections that would have been missed entirely surface in the analysis.

Section 4

Sector Applications

ClearSeek deployments support multiple operational sectors, each applying the same underlying technology to a different class of problem.

Security and public safety operations use ClearSeek to identify suspects, vehicles, or weapons across multi-camera environments and across feeds from different platforms.

Retail and logistics operations use it to trace shipments and products, including cases where markings have changed, identifiers have been removed, or counterfeit material has entered the supply chain.

Brand protection programs use ClearSeek to detect counterfeit goods and unauthorized use of trademarks across digital and physical channels.

Medical imaging operations use the technology to match and analyze diagnostic images with high precision.

Arts and media institutions use it for authentication, provenance tracing, and image-based archive management.

Section 5

PCA Integration, Recognition, and Engagement

ClearSeek deployments operate fully on-premises with no internet connection required, as a cloud-hosted capability, or as a hybrid deployment depending on the client's data control and operational requirements. PCA builds the operational layer around the technology so the deployment delivers outcomes rather than software.

That operational layer includes the integration plan with existing investigative platforms and surveillance infrastructure, the investigative workflow design that makes ClearSeek searches part of the analyst's standard process rather than a separate tool, the operator training on the search interface and result interpretation, the procedures that govern when and how ClearSeek findings are validated, and the long-term technical support that keeps the deployment current as the technology advances.

ClearSeek was named Company of the Year at the 2024 North American Human Trafficking Conference for its role in exploitation prevention investigations. Advocate Tim Tebow has invested in DejaVuAI® Inc. to advance the technology's application to child trafficking and exploitation prevention work.

Discuss a Proof of Concept or Operational Deployment

Contact PCA to explore a ClearSeek pilot, integration plan, or operational deployment for your investigative or security environment.

Contact Us
Home / SCT Mobile Surveillance / Configurations and Pricing
SCT Mobile Surveillance Platform

Trailer Configurations and Pricing

PCA has access to a large inventory of NDAA-compliant solar mobile surveillance trailers through its SCT partnership, with preferred pricing across all configurations. Pricing is structured by configuration tier and rental duration. Contact PCA for a project-specific quote.

Configuration Tiers

Standard, Advanced, and Custom Builds

Every trailer configuration starts with the same core solar platform. Camera packages, analytics, and monitoring options are layered on based on the mission.

Tier 1

Basic Surveillance

Core solar platform with standard fixed and PTZ camera configuration. Suitable for general area surveillance, parking, and construction monitoring.

  • Solar array with lithium battery system
  • 4 fixed HD cameras
  • 4 PTZ cameras with 30x optical zoom
  • 1080p resolution, approximately 300-foot IR range
  • 4G LTE wireless streaming
  • 26-foot retractable mast
  • Remote web and mobile dashboard access
  • GPS tracking and anti-tamper alerts

MSRP lease from $1,800/month. MSRP purchase $32,000/unit. PCA client pricing is below retail. Contact for a quote.

Tier 2

Advanced Analytics

Standard camera configuration plus onboard video analytics. License plate recognition, behavioral analytics, and automated alerting included.

  • All Tier 1 hardware
  • License plate recognition with alert triggers
  • Person and vehicle detection analytics
  • Line crossing and intrusion zone alerts
  • Loitering detection with configurable thresholds
  • Vehicle color and type search
  • Person search by clothing color
  • Event-based recording and clip export

MSRP lease from $1,800/month. MSRP purchase $32,000/unit. PCA client pricing is below retail. Contact for a quote.

Tier 3

Complete Platform

Complete platform with thermal signature tracking, active deterrence, and live agent monitoring. Purpose-built for high-risk or high-value deployments.

  • All Tier 1 and Tier 2 features
  • Thermal signature tracking and heat detection
  • Active audio deterrence with two-way communication
  • Point-to-point, satellite, or Wi-Fi connectivity options
  • Optional live agent remote monitoring
  • Integration with existing VMS or GSOC
  • RTSP stream output to external platforms
  • Custom camera brand options: Axis, Hanwha, Panasonic, Milesight

MSRP lease from $1,800/month. MSRP purchase $32,000/unit. PCA client pricing is below retail. Contact for a quote.

MSRP Pricing

Lease and Purchase Rates

$1,800
Per Month / MSRP Lease
$32,000
Per Unit / MSRP Purchase

PCA pricing to clients is well below retail. Contact us for a project-specific quote based on your configuration, deployment duration, and number of units.

  • Purchase includes a 5-year warranty on the trailer and batteries
  • Purchase includes a 10-year warranty on the solar panels
  • Delivery, setup, and removal are not included in the lease and are billed separately, quoted based on site location and deployment scope
  • Lease agreements available from 30 days through multi-year terms
  • Multi-unit programs carry preferred pricing through PCA's SCT partnership
Monitoring Options

Self-Monitored, Integrated, or Fully Managed

Monitoring is available and can be configured to match your existing operations. The cost of monitoring is determined by site activity and scope of work. Contact PCA to discuss your specific requirements.

  • Self-monitored: authorized staff access the web dashboard or mobile app and manage all alerting and review
  • Integrated: RTSP output connects to your existing VMS so your current team monitors through familiar tools
  • Live agent: third-party remote monitoring available as a monthly add-on through PCA, priced based on site activity and scope of work
  • Hybrid: some cameras monitored internally, others by remote agents based on coverage zone priority
Coverage

Delivery, setup, and removal are not included in the monthly lease and are billed separately, quoted based on site location and scope. Continental US deployments supported. Alaska and Hawaii available with advance planning. International deployments evaluated case by case through SCT directly.

Get a Project-Specific Quote

Pricing varies by configuration tier, rental duration, delivery location, and monitoring selections. Contact PCA with your site details and deployment timeline for a same-day quote.

Request a Quote
Home/Solutions/Dark Watch
Real-Time Risk and Compliance Screening

Dark Watch: Know Who Is Coming Before They Arrive

Real-time risk screening embedded directly into the systems your organization already operates. Pre-Arrival Intelligence for hospitality, gaming, healthcare, real estate, payments, and more.

450M+ Global Profiles
1,400+ Intelligence Sources
API-First Integration
Zero PII Stored
The Problem

Most Security Tools Only Work When the Information Already Exists

Facial recognition requires a photo. License plate recognition requires a plate. If neither exists in your system, neither tool produces anything. These technologies are information-dependent. Remove the information and you remove the capability, regardless of how sophisticated the underlying system is.

The gap is not in the tool itself. The gap is in assuming physical surveillance infrastructure alone is sufficient to surface risk before it reaches your property or platform. Traditional compliance and suitability reviews compound the problem by being point-in-time snapshots, not continuous awareness.

  • Unknown vehicle arrives with no plate in your system
  • Subject has never been on your property, no photo on file
  • Vendor clears a standard check, then creates an incident
  • New registration uses a name your records have never seen
  • Transaction is processed before any risk signal is surfaced
What Dark Watch Does Differently

Dark Watch does not wait for a name, plate, or photo to already exist in your database. It screens against 1,400+ intelligence sources and 450M+ global profiles at the moment of a transaction, registration, reservation, or access request. Before arrival, not after an incident.

  • Screens at the point of transaction, not after the fact
  • No SSN required or stored
  • Flags by threat confidence, recency, type, and country of origin
  • Returns results in near real time
  • No new system required; attaches to existing data streams
Pricing

Dark Watch is priced at $1.00 per search with no minimum commitment. No SSN storage, no large data migration, no long implementation timeline. A no-cost proof of concept using a file review is available to qualified organizations.

Integration Points

Attaches to the Systems You Already Operate

Dark Watch is API-first and designed to operate as a layer on top of your existing transactional and operational data streams. No rip-and-replace required.

Hospitality and Gaming

Screen at reservation creation, check-in, VIP registration, rewards program enrollment, and cage transactions. Flag known threat actors before they reach the property.

Healthcare and Patient Intake

Attach to patient intake and registration workflows. Screen for known threats to staff and facility without creating compliance exposure from traditional background checks.

Real Estate and Property Management

Screen at lease application, showing scheduling, and tenant onboarding. Identify known risk profiles before access to a property or unit is granted.

Financial Services and Payments

Embed into payment processing, account creation, and KYC workflows. Screen counterparties and account holders against global intelligence sources at the point of transaction.

Licensing and Regulatory Compliance

Attach to license applications, vendor onboarding, and contractor credentialing. Surface risk signals that traditional compliance reviews do not reach.

Utility and Municipal Services

Screen at utility service onboarding, permit applications, and municipal service registration. Identify flagged individuals or entities before access to sensitive infrastructure or services is established.

How the Proof of Concept Works

No-Cost, No-Commitment File Review

The fastest path to understanding what Dark Watch surfaces in your environment is a no-cost file review POC. PCA submits a defined set of records from your existing data (names, addresses, emails, phone numbers) against the Dark Watch platform and returns a results summary showing what was flagged and at what confidence level.

  • No SSN required at any stage
  • Only four fields needed: Name, Address, Phone, Email
  • Results returned with threat confidence, recency, type, and country of origin
  • PCA manages the process under a mutual NDA and data management agreement
  • Full production deployment can be scoped immediately following POC results
Why PCA for Dark Watch

Business Development, Integration Guidance, and Stakeholder Engagement

PCA's role in Dark Watch is business development, stakeholder engagement, and deployment guidance. With existing relationships across LVMPD, the Nevada AG's Office, DPS, DCFS, and active engagement in Nevada's human trafficking legislative initiatives, PCA brings context that translates Dark Watch's capability into real-world operational use cases that resonate with decision-makers.

  • Existing law enforcement and regulatory relationships across Nevada
  • Active involvement in SCR3 human trafficking initiative creates direct application context
  • Experience designing the POC structure, NDA, and data management agreement
  • Hospitality, gaming, and government sector relationships for direct introductions
Works Well With

Dark Watch is most effective as part of a layered risk posture.

UVSS Under Vehicle Scanning
Pair Dark Watch person screening with UVSS undercarriage inspection at the same access point. Dark Watch screens the people in the vehicle. UVSS scans the vehicle itself. Complete coverage of who and what crosses the access point.
Investigations
PCA does not conduct investigations directly. PCA's investigative program advisory designs SOPs and decision protocols for how internal teams respond when Dark Watch surfaces a hit, including escalation paths, documentation standards, and chain of evidence.
AI Governance Advisory
Real-time risk screening pulls from 1,400+ intelligence sources and surfaces decisions about people in seconds. PCA's governance advisory aligns Dark Watch deployments with ISO/IEC 42001 and the NIST AI RMF for accountability over automated screening decisions.
Compliance Services
For organizations in regulated industries, Dark Watch screening intersects with employment screening laws, fair-credit reporting requirements, and industry-specific oversight. PCA's compliance services support the regulatory requirements that govern how screening data is used and documented.
Human Trafficking Initiatives
Dark Watch supports PCA's active anti-trafficking work, including the Illicit Massage Business (IMB) initiative. Real-time screening of individuals linked to trafficking networks helps law enforcement, regulators, and nonprofit partners identify and disrupt operations.
ClearSeek Pattern Recognition
When Dark Watch flags an individual, ClearSeek can cross-reference their identity against body camera, CCTV, drone, and social media imagery, building a more complete picture for internal investigators working the case.

Request a No-Cost Proof of Concept

Contact PCA to discuss your environment, sign a mutual NDA, and begin the file review POC process. No SSN required. No long implementation timeline.

Home/Services/AI Governance Advisory
Governance, Compliance and Organizational Resilience

AI Governance Advisory and ISO 42001 Implementation

Organizations deploying intelligent systems need governance structures that keep pace with regulatory expectations and operational risk. PCA designs and implements those structures, starting with ISO 42001:2023 and built to align with NIST CSF 2.0.

Why This Matters Now

Deploying Technology Without Governance Creates Liability, Not Capability

Every organization deploying intelligent systems, whether surveillance analytics, screening platforms, or automated decision tools, is making implicit governance decisions. The question is whether those decisions are documented, defensible, and aligned with emerging standards before an incident, an audit, or litigation forces the issue.

ISO 42001:2023 establishes the first international standard for AI Management Systems. It gives organizations a structured, auditable approach to identifying, managing, and documenting the risks that intelligent systems introduce. PCA guides organizations through that structure from gap assessment through certification readiness.

  • Regulators in financial services, healthcare, and government are accelerating scrutiny of algorithmic and automated systems
  • Vendors selling AI-adjacent products increasingly require governance documentation from enterprise clients
  • Litigation involving automated decisions requires demonstrable oversight and audit trails
  • Insurance underwriters are beginning to ask governance questions before issuing technology liability coverage
PCA AI Systems in Scope

PCA applies ISO 42001 governance principles to the intelligent systems it deploys and advises on, including:

  • iDFR autonomous indoor drone response
  • UVSS automated anomaly detection and LPR
  • Dark Watch real-time risk screening
  • ClearSeek deterministic pattern recognition
  • SCT trailer video analytics
Pricing Model

PCA targets pricing at 35 to 55 percent below enterprise consulting rates. Recommended engagement model is a hybrid fixed-fee implementation plus an ongoing maintenance retainer. Contact PCA for a scope-specific proposal.

What PCA Builds

Seven Core Deliverables

Every PCA AI governance engagement produces a structured set of documents that form the operational and audit foundation of your program.

Clause-by-Clause Reference

A plain-language interpretation of each ISO 42001 clause mapped to your organization's specific systems and processes.

AI Policy Document

A formal AI policy aligned with ISO 42001 requirements, including acceptable use, risk tolerance definitions, and accountability structures.

AIMS Scope Document

Formally defines which systems are in scope for your AI Management System and establishes boundaries for the certification program.

Internal Gap Assessment

A structured audit of current practices against ISO 42001 requirements, identifying gaps and prioritizing remediation by risk level.

Certification Roadmap

A phased plan from current state to certification readiness, with milestones, dependencies, and resource requirements defined.

Market Cost Matrix

A benchmarked comparison of certification costs across certifying bodies, helping leadership make informed investment decisions.

PCA Pricing Structure

A transparent, scope-specific proposal covering implementation phases, retainer options, and comparison to enterprise consulting alternatives.

NIST CSF 2.0 Alignment

Cross-mapping of your ISO 42001 governance program to NIST CSF 2.0 for organizations that need to satisfy both standards simultaneously.

ISO 9001:2015 Integration

Quality Management as the Foundation

For organizations that already hold or are pursuing ISO 9001:2015 certification, PCA integrates the AI governance program into the existing Quality Management System rather than building a parallel structure. This reduces implementation cost, avoids documentation duplication, and creates a unified audit surface for certifying bodies.

  • ISO 42001 and ISO 9001 share common structural elements that PCA maps to avoid redundancy
  • A unified management review process covers both standards simultaneously
  • Internal audit programs are combined where scope overlaps
  • Risk register templates are designed to accommodate both standards
Who This Engagement Fits

Organizations That Already Deploy or Are Evaluating Intelligent Systems

  • Security integrators deploying analytics, surveillance, or automated screening tools
  • Healthcare organizations using automated triage, intake, or diagnostic support tools
  • Government contractors required to document AI governance for federal engagements
  • Financial services firms with algorithmic decision tools facing regulatory scrutiny
  • Hospitality and gaming operators deploying facial recognition, screening, or automated fraud detection
  • Any organization whose legal or compliance team is beginning to ask governance questions about deployed systems

Start With a Gap Assessment

The fastest path to understanding your governance exposure is a structured gap assessment against ISO 42001 requirements. Contact PCA to scope an assessment engagement.