onymouse@netcom.UUCP (John Debert) (12/30/90)
I've recently heard some about the "Home Escort" device which is used to keep track of convictees at home in lieu of putting them in jail. The device consists of three parts: A leg bracelet worn by the convictee (for lack of a better word), a radio device in a black box with two nine inch whips on it which communicates with the bracelet and is attached to a large console which is then connected to the phone line and makes a call to a central station approximately every four hours at 300 baud. Now, having seen the device, I am curious about what frequencies it uses to communicate with the bracelet and how it talks to the central station, i.e., what it says to the station (and what the station says in return) and how. Searching the low-power police freqs have so far turned up nothing from the unit and I'm growing curiouser and curiouser about it. BTW, the unit is made in Colorado and is FCC registered but that's all the info I have been able to come up with. Thanx, jd onymouse@netcom.UUCP netcom!onymouse@apple.com