From: Andrew Yee <ayee@nova.astro.utoronto.ca>
Newsgroups: sci.space.news
Subject: NASA-developed technology helping put lawbreakers behind bars (Forwarded)
Date: Mon, 09 Jun 2003 08:26:34 -0400
Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory - Pasadena CA
Approved: sci-space-news@zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Message-ID: <3EE47CFA.2010009@nova.astro.utoronto.ca>

Jerry Berg
Media Relations Dept.
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL
jerry.berg@msfc.nasa.gov
(256) 544-0034

For release: 06/05/03

Release No.: 03-091

CROOKS, CRIMINALS AND SADDAM BEWARE!

NASA-developed technology helping put lawbreakers behind bars

 From bombings and other homeland security threats, to child abductions, to 
verifying the "real" Saddam Hussein, a video enhancement system developed at 
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., is proving to be a 
valuable law enforcement tool. It's helping agencies investigate crimes -- and, 
put criminals behind bars.

It's been an unlikely outcome for an invention that started out as an effort by 
two space scientists to come up with a tool to assist in their studies of the 
Sun and weather systems on Earth.

The technology known as VISAR -- short for Video Image Stabilization and 
Registration -- can turn dark, jittery images captured by home video, security 
systems and video cameras mounted in police cars into clearer, stable images.

NASA scientists Dr. David Hathaway and Paul Meyer, who study violent explosions 
on the Sun and examine hazardous weather conditions on Earth, created VISAR to 
aid in their space-program research. Now, through NASA's commercial licensing 
process, the technology has become available in the marketplace and is 
increasingly finding applications with down-to-Earth benefits.

VISAR has been licensed commercially by Intergraph Corp., of Huntsville and 
incorporated into Video Analyst, a workstation that can stabilize and enhance 
video, brighten dark pictures and enlarge small sections of pictures to reveal 
clues about crimes. The system is built around the industry-standard Microsoft 
Windows operating system and Adobe Premiere video editing software.

"VISAR has a proven track record in delivering solid video evidence and is of 
paramount importance in our success with Video Analyst," said Trey McKay, 
manager of Integrated Products Division, Intergraph Solutions Group.

The VISAR "track record" includes about a dozen criminal cases where Hathaway 
and Meyer have assisted police departments and the FBI. The first, and still 
most notable, in the string of investigations was analysis of video from the 
infamous bombing in Atlanta's Centennial Park during the 1996 Olympic Summer 
Games. In that incident, Hathaway and Meyer worked with the bureau to enhance 
poor quality video clips.

More recently, ABC News asked Intergraph's Gene Grindstaff to analyze video 
clips that aired on Iraqi television March 20, apparently showing Saddam 
Hussein. Officials wanted to verify if Hussein survived a U.S. air strike the 
previous day, or whether the video was that of a body double. Using Video 
Analyst with VISAR, it took about 90 minutes to compare the ABC footage to prior 
Iraqi television images of Hussein and determine -- with 99 percent certainty -- 
it was Hussein, Grindstaff said.

Demonstrated capabilities such as these apparently are convincing for customers. 
A Chicago-area law enforcement association -- the South Surburban Mayors and 
Managers Association -- purchased Video Analyst specifically based on its 
inclusion of the NASA-developed VISAR, McKay said. The association pooled 
resources to buy Video Analyst and 15 portable units, making the system 
available to 43 municipalities in the Illinois counties of Cook -- which 
includes the city of Chicago -- and Wills.

Last year, three Marshall Center employees, including Hathaway, Meyer and Sammy 
Nabors of Marshall's Technology Transfer Department, won the Federal Laboratory 
Consortium's Excellence in Technology Transfer Award for VISAR. Nabors works 
with Marshall scientists interested in patenting their inventions, and his 
department encourages companies to license products for commercial applications.

VISAR was named NASA's Commercial Invention of the Year in March. Hathaway and 
Meyer were also nominated by NASA to compete for the national Inventor of the 
Year Award and they were among the five finalists in the competition, which 
yearly recognizes outstanding American inventors whose work has been patented or 
made commercially available.

NASA's Technology Transfer Program improves life on Earth with technology 
developed in the space program. To learn more about VISAR and the Marshall 
Center, visit the Marshall Technology Transfer Department Web site at:

      http://techtran.msfc.nasa.gov/

[NOTE: Images supporting this release are available at
http://www1.msfc.nasa.gov/NEWSROOM/news/photos/2000/photos00-257.htm ]

