Pimloc has announced the launch of its new Video Search feature for the Secure Redact platform, designed to help law enforcement accelerate video review while preserving privacy and evidential integrity.
The Video Search feature is said to enable officers to locate specific scenes, objects and individuals in video recordings based on attributes such as clothing, quickly identifying relevant footage without manually reviewing every frame.
Once identified, these elements of the video can reportedly be securely redacted, allowing investigators to focus on critical evidence efficiently and responsibly.
Pimloc has reported that by reducing the time required to review video with search and coupling that with Secure Redact’s precise redaction, it allows agencies to manage digital evidence more effectively while safeguarding the privacy of individuals captured in footage.
Simon Randall, CEO and Co-Founder, Pimloc said: “Video evidence is critical to modern policing, but reviewing hours of footage can be slow and resource-intensive.
“Secure Redact’s new Video Search capabilities allow officers to quickly locate what matters most while protecting sensitive information.
“It helps agencies work smarter, accelerate investigations, and maintain public trust, all without compromising privacy.”
Pimloc’s Secure Redact platform is said to support automated redaction for faces, license plates and other sensitive elements.
Video Search reportedly builds on this foundation, integrating seamlessly into existing workflows to enhance efficiency for investigative teams.
The company has articulated that the feature supports body-worn cameras, CCTV, mobile phone footage and other video sources, providing a consistent, privacy-first approach to digital evidence management.
Randall concluded: “With Video Search, we’re allowing officers to pinpoint critical footage quickly and reducing hours of manual review to minutes.
“This lets teams concentrate on solving cases rather than sifting through irrelevant video, all while maintaining strict privacy controls.”