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The show depicted police officers targeting criminals with a high-tech bait car, rigged with hidden cameras and radio trackers. Footage is shown from in-car cameras, police car dashcams, and film crews with the police officers. The show holds a TV-14 rating due to strong language, although most of the profanity is censored.
A bait car, also called a decoy car, hot car, or trap car, is a vehicle used by law enforcement agencies to capture car thieves or thieves who steal items from cars. [1] The vehicles are modified with audio/video surveillance technology, and can be remotely monitored and controlled. Those set up to catch car thieves may include GPS tracking.
To Catch a Cheater is a scripted [1] American web series published on YouTube. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] With over 3 million subscribers, the web series supposedly follows people suspected of committing adultery , or cheating, on their partners.
The bait car is a vehicle that can be safely disabled by law enforcement in the event of someone trying to steal it. Milwaukee police using Kias as ‘bait cars’ to catch car thieves [Video ...
YouTube has updated its monetization policy for adult content in two areas: Creators are now eligible to receive ad revenue from videos that feature “non-sexually graphic dance, such as twerking ...
Police had been trying to locate a so-called bait package, a tracking device the department provides to members of the community to catch "porch pirates" in the act of theft, according to Lt ...
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"You Wouldn't Steal a Car" is the first sentence and commonly used name of a public service announcement that debuted on July 12, 2004 in cinemas, [1] and July 27 on home media, which was part of the anti-copyright infringement campaign "Piracy. It's a crime.