The center looks like it came straight out of a movie. Rows of agents face ahead to monitor five separate screens at their stations, the entire front wall of the room is covered in large screens that flicker with different camera feeds every few minutes, and a scrolling LED news ticker delivers updates from the Associated Press and Reuters. An automated announcement comes over the loudspeakers. This is the 24-hour Real Time Crime Center, far from Hollywood at the Detroit Public Safety Headquarters on the outskirts of downtown.

The crime center, said Detroit Police Department Lieutenant Sonia Russell, operates like a fusion center – a state or federal-level intelligence center for gathering threat-related information.

“The difference between us and a fusion center is that we’re not on the state level. All the products that we have here are on the same level as being a fusion center with counterterrorism, with the statistical data, with the crime patterns and trends, with the camera footage,” she said. “That’s what’s unique about us, we got everything right here, and a lot of real time crime centers don’t have that. We’re able to do all the things that a fusion center can do.”

The Crime Intelligence Unit, dumping cameras, and Project Green Light make up the bulk of the crime center’s feed.

Project Green Light is a considerable portion of how they track crime in the city, using their “hot list” – the area around a recent crime – as a way to prioritize where they should be monitoring and focusing their efforts in order to prevent crime.

Before, the program was getting notifications by phone and email from their communications department. With Project Green Light, they already have the location. “The whole idea is to be proactive and not reactive,” Russell said, adding that everyone will get coverage from the project but that it does help officers monitor as needed.

Stats are done daily to weekly, and the officers are able to map the statistic of high-risk crimes like narcotics and breaking and entering.

The screens on the front wall are feeds from Project Green Light locations and dumping cameras. One analyst scrolled through Twitter and other social media to check for any threats or mentions of crime. Next to him, was Steven Criuckshank, an intelligence specialist with the Counterterrorism Threat Analysis Team. He showed our team a video of a shooting last November that was captured on the Project Green Light cameras.

The video was graphic: two men approach a woman on a street with guns drawn, and the woman points up to the camera as if to caution them that they’re being watched. She drops her purse and tries to run, but is shot in the leg and falls. The men drive off.