About CrimePulse

Built because neighborhoods
deserve better
intelligence.

Your block is already full of cameras, witnesses, and data. But it never reaches the right hands — or arrives too late to matter. CrimePulse changes that.

Why we built this

The gap is the problem.

When a crime happens in a neighborhood, the evidence is usually already there. A Ring doorbell caught it. A neighbor saw it. Someone filed a report two days earlier with a matching vehicle description.

None of that connects. Reports sit in separate inboxes. Footage stays on homeowner phones. The correlation that could solve the case — or prevent the next one — never gets made.

CrimePulse was built to close that gap. To take everything your community already sees and knows, organize it in real time, and put it where it can actually stop something.

17
Signal sources fused into one score
<10s
Average time to send a neighborhood alert
100%
Homeowner-controlled clip sharing
0
Ethnic descriptor fields. Anywhere in the platform.
Principles

What we won't compromise on.

Privacy by design

Footage never leaves your device unless you approve it — one request, one clip, one decision. We collect only the signals needed to score an incident.

No profiling. Period.

There is no ethnic descriptor field anywhere in CrimePulse. Physical descriptors only: height, build, clothing, hair, tattoos, distinguishing marks. This is a policy, not a setting.

Community owned

The data stays in the hands of the people who created it. Residents control their footage. HOA admins control community data. Law enforcement accesses only what it's given.

Court-grade standards

Every piece of evidence is SHA-256 hashed on upload. Chain-of-custody logged on every access. Admissibility built in from day one.

The company

CrimePulse, Inc.

CrimePulse is an early-stage company headquartered in the United States, building at the intersection of community intelligence, public safety technology, and civil rights compliance. We're building toward a June 2026 launch — prioritizing trust and correctness over speed.

Ready to see it in action?

Join the waitlist for early access — June 2026.