Cytta Corp. announced that they have signed with the New Jersey'sOcean County Sheriff's Office as the latest adopter of their IGAN 2.0 (Incident Global Area Network) Incident Command System. The IGAN 2.0 ICS integrates any available video and audio streams (drones, body cams, fixed cameras, cell phones etc.), enabling real-time situational awareness while providing relevant and detailed actionable intelligence to law enforcement on an ongoing basis.

Ocean County Sheriff Michael Mastronardy, a well-respected forty-year veteran of law enforcement and Senior Member of the Technology Committee for the National Sheriffs' Association, has purchased IGAN 2.0 ICS for immediate installation. Sheriff Mastronardy's decision for Ocean County, follows extensive meetings, discussions, and a series of demonstrations by the Cytta technology team to multiple Sheriff's at the National Sheriff's Association annual meeting in Kansas City in July 2022. IGAN 2.0 ICS is a highly secure, SaaS-based advanced system that offers real-time, integrated communications for multiple video and voice devices.

Cytta's IGAN platform is a fully integrated, multimedia connectivity platform that incorporates integrated features, including an "advanced interactive mapping" feature and other advanced intelligence capabilities. The new features of the SaaS based IGAN 2.0 ICS allow for the collection and dissemination of real-time video and audio situational awareness while concurrently serving as a real-time information collection and integration tool. Cytta also recently assisted law enforcement with the development of a new protocol for the platform called "DroneClear," a building surveillance and breaching capability that provides law enforcement officers utilizing the IGAN with advanced intelligence before entering any potentially dangerous space via real-time video feeds from small drones deployed internally in a building or home during any incident.

IGAN has the unique capability of capturing multiple video and audio streams, regardless of source, in real-time and collecting them into immediately actionable information. This allows all participating first responders, real-time crime center(s), and fusion centers to act together based on the actionable information that had previously been difficult or impossible to attain. IGAN has been utilized successfully in life and death scenarios, including hostage-taking, search-and-rescue, felony-in-progress, fugitive apprehension, building and home searches, and warrant-based apprehensions.