For 2026, the municipal government plans to install 150 new video surveillance cameras, adding to the existing ones throughout the city. This strategy has already led to the recovery of stolen vehicles in various parts of the municipality.
Mayor Liz Tapia Castro reported that during 2025, 44 monitoring points were replaced with new equipment, and security checkpoints were reactivated. Last month alone, six vehicles reported stolen in states such as Michoacán and Querétaro were recovered.
She explained that the system immediately detects vehicles with active reports; an alert is triggered and sent to the C2 command center, which then notifies law enforcement agencies with images and vehicle information. This information is also shared with neighboring municipalities.
The recovered vehicles were either found abandoned or located during operations, a result of continuous monitoring and inter-institutional coordination. These efforts will be strengthened with the expansion of the camera system this year.

Source: meganoticias





