Marked units.
Geo-tagged proof.
We don't bill for patrol we can't prove. Every round we run is time-stamped to GPS accuracy within 5 meters, every checkpoint confirmed by an NFC tag scan at the property, and every shift delivered to your portal before 9 AM the next morning. If there's no log, there's no line-item.
Four problems patrol
actually solves.
Mobile patrol is not a standing post and it is not alarm monitoring. It's the middle tool — the right answer when a full-time officer is overkill but an unmanned site is uninsurable. These are the four scenarios we quote it for most often.
After-hours risk
Construction sites, equipment yards, car dealerships, closed retail, and industrial back-lots carry most of their theft exposure between 9 PM and 5 AM. Randomized visits during that window deter the opportunistic hit and document the serious one.
False-alarm response
Sites averaging more than three alarm trips a month rack up city false-alarm fines and burn out their monitoring contract. Patrol-verified alarm response lets us clear the scene in under 12 minutes and filter real incidents from bad sensors before PD rolls.
Multi-site without posts
A single property manager with 6 to 10 sites rarely needs a standing guard at any one address — but all of them benefit from a visible marked unit cycling through. One contract, one invoice, one portal — ten geofenced sites monitored per route.
Insurance discount
Most commercial property insurers credit 5 to 15 percent on premium when documented mobile patrol is contracted and logs are auditable. We deliver the carrier packet — coverage letter, schedule, portal access — so your broker can file the endorsement.
Six moving parts.
One signed log.
Mobile patrol looks simple from the curb — a marked unit pulling up and leaving five minutes later. Under the hood, six systems coordinate to produce the single timestamped log the client actually needs. Here is what runs between dispatch pickup and portal delivery.
Vehicle platform
24 marked SUVs — Ford Explorer and Chevrolet Tahoe — with full reflective decal wrap, dual LED lightbars, dash and rear-facing cameras, and a locked rear cargo cage. Each vehicle reports position and telemetry every 30 seconds to our Samsara fleet console.
Routing engine
Dispatch runs on a geofence-aware routing layer that balances scheduled rounds, alarm calls, and supervisor requests in real time. When an alarm hits, the closest marked unit — not the closest route — is rerouted, and the bumped site gets its visit pushed into the next valid window.
NFC tag technology
Every client site has between 3 and 12 weatherproof NFC tags mounted on door frames, gate latches, mechanical rooms, and perimeter points. Officers scan each tag with their issued phone; the scan is rejected unless it lands inside a 5-meter GPS validation radius around the tag's enrolled coordinates.
Schedule algorithm
Our algorithm randomizes across four variables: visit start time inside the shift envelope, minimum-gap between visits, checkpoint scan order, and approach route. Total volume per site is contractually fixed — what varies is the pattern, so no observer can map our cadence.
On-scene response
If an officer finds an anomaly — door ajar, vehicle present, glass damage — the phone kicks into incident mode. Body cam goes on, dispatcher is pinged, photos are geo-tagged automatically, and the escalation ladder runs: client contact, monitoring company, then law enforcement if warranted.
Client portal
By 9 AM the client sees a dashboard with: every checkpoint scan, every photo, site dwell time, anomaly notes, and the live position of tonight's patrol vehicle. All logs export as signed PDF for insurance, property management, or court record. 13 months of retention, free.
What shows up
at your gate.
You can audit our rolling stock the same way you audit your own: we publish the fleet spec, the driver prerequisites, and the in-car tech stack. If the vehicle pulling up to your site doesn't match what's on this page, it isn't a Shield of Steel patrol.
Vehicles & markings
Our primary platform is the Ford Police Interceptor Utility and Chevrolet Tahoe Police Pursuit Vehicle — the same commercial-duty platforms run by law enforcement, because they take the abuse that nightly patrol puts on suspension, brakes, and drivetrain. Every unit is blacked-out to ink-1 exterior with full white-reflective decal wrap: Shield of Steel wordmark on both flanks, license number on the rear quarter, and 24/7 dispatch phone on the tailgate.
Lighting is dual-bar LED — primary roof bar for stationary visibility, secondary grille bar for low-light approach. No sirens; we are private security, not emergency services. Tinted rear windows conceal equipment. The rear cargo area is separated by a locked cage because officers routinely carry first-aid, tourniquet kits, evidence bags, and a fire extinguisher.
In-car technology
Each vehicle runs a Samsara or Verizon Connect telematics unit with 30-second GPS pings, harsh-event detection, and a forward-facing dash cam. The officer's issued phone carries our dispatch app, NFC scanner, and body-worn camera pairing. Every piece of it talks to one portal — the same one the client sees.
Driver qualifications
- Clean MVR · 3-year lookbackNo more than 1 moving violation · zero DUI or reckless in 5 years
- Defensive-driving certificationSmith System or equivalent · renewed annually · documented on file
- Emergency-vehicle operationsEVOC training for all patrol-qualified officers · pursuit prohibited in policy
- TN security licenseTN unarmed registration minimum · TN armed registration for armed patrol units · license number visible on badge
- Site orientationMinimum 3 supervised shifts per route before solo assignment · client-signed
- Range qualificationArmed patrol officers qualify quarterly at our contracted range · scored
The eight questions
everyone asks.
These are the queries clients type into Google the week before they ever call us. The answers here are the same answers you'll get from a senior dispatcher at 2 AM. No asterisks, no marketing rotation — straight operational truth.
01How often do patrols come by?+
02Can I see the patrol log?+
03What vehicles do you use?+
04Do patrols respond to alarms?+
05How is the schedule randomized?+
06Do you patrol unincorporated areas?+
07What's the radius per patrol route?+
08Can I add a patrol to an existing contract?+
Walk the site.
Map the route.
A senior patrol supervisor will come to the property, walk the perimeter with you, mark checkpoint locations, and deliver a written patrol plan within five business days. The walkthrough is always free. Every proposal is line-itemed — visits per night, checkpoints per site, portal access — so you know what you're paying for before you sign.