See it before
it happens. Not after.
The first time most departments hear about a meetup gone wrong is the 911 call. When a resident chooses to share one, it lands on a dashboard we built and gave you — before anybody drives anywhere.
This is not a tip line.
And it's not a tracker. A resident tells you where they'll be. That's it. Nobody is dispatched. Nobody is watching. You're just aware.
You see: planned venue + time window
You never see: anyone's live location
Three reasons, none of which cost you a budget line.
Ahead of it, not after it
Advance visibility into meetups residents chose to share — the venue, the window, who is involved.
Deterrence by design
Every shared meetup stacks barriers: a verified ID, a documented time and place, both parties informed, your department aware. Each layer raises the cost of a bad idea.
Community policing, zero budget
A visible partnership with residents. No cost, no hardware, no integration — an extension of the exchange-zone program you already run.
The resident opts in. The resident can opt out.
A resident opts in
Their choice, alone. There is no way for a department to request that a resident share one.
The other person is told, then accepts
The invitee sees the police share before accepting. It only goes live after they say yes.
It appears on your dashboard
You see the planned venue, the time window, and a verified legal name for anyone who verified. You never see where either person is, where they live, or a word they said.
Nothing is dispatched
It's a plan on a screen, until it isn't needed. Every view of this dashboard is logged against the officer who opened it.
Always, and by design — not by policy.
Opt-in only. Nothing is shared by default. Ever.
Both parties informed. It only goes live after the invitee says yes.
Opt out anytime. Withdraw the share and it leaves your screen.
ZIP-scoped. Only meetups inside the ZIPs your department covers, validated against Census boundaries.
Planned venue only. A place and a time window. Never live GPS.
Audit-logged. Every view recorded against the officer who opened it.
Read this part twice.
It never claims anything happened.
If a resident hits SOS during a confirmed meetup they opted to share, near its scheduled window, every approved department covering that ZIP receives one email advisory — worded as an unverified report of possible concern.
It does not say a crime occurred. It does not say anyone is hurt. We don't know that, and saying so would be a lie that costs somebody. One advisory per user, per department, with the planned venue — deduplicated. And it never delays the resident's own emergency contacts, who are always reached first.
Because you will be asked.
Built by a veteran and former federal law enforcement officer who led the Department of Homeland Security's “If You See Something, Say Something®” campaign. Somebody who has sat on your side of the desk designed what you're looking at.