Every Threat Scan Also Searches for a Missing Person.
RVIS is not an add-on. It is not optional. It cannot be disabled. Every time RTIS scans for threats at your facility entry points, RVIS simultaneously searches for missing and endangered persons. Your hospital security infrastructure becomes a recovery network.
Research indicates that 68% to 88% of trafficking victims encounter a healthcare provider during their exploitation — most often in the emergency department
Every RTIS threat scan simultaneously runs an RVIS victim recovery scan — on every sensor, every time
RVIS runs on every RTIS sensor with no additional hardware, no additional contracts, and no additional configuration
RVIS cannot be disabled, deactivated, or turned off — the dual mission is architectural, not configurable
One Scan. Two Missions. Zero Additional Cost.
Same Sensor. Same Image. Same Timeline.
When a dedicated sensor at your emergency department entrance captures a single sub-100KB face crop, that same image is queried against both threat and victim databases in the same fraction of a second. No second scan. No second sensor. No second integration. Under 60 seconds from capture to human-verified alert — for either mission.
Architecturally Integrated, Not Bundled
RVIS is not a premium tier or an add-on contract. It runs on every RTIS sensor by design. There is no facility configuration option to turn it off. Your hospital can never be in a position where threat detection was prioritized over the recovery of a missing child or a trafficking victim — because the two missions share the same scan.
No Additional Hardware, No Additional Cost
Every dollar your facility invests in entry-point threat detection simultaneously invests in victim recovery. No second sensor at the ED entrance. No second cable. No second power source. The infrastructure your security team deployed for staff and patient safety simultaneously joins a national recovery network the moment it goes live.
Same Privacy Architecture for Both Missions
The dual mission does not change the privacy model. Non-match images are deleted instantly. No video. No audio. No PHI created. No biometric templates stored. 99.99%+ of patients, visitors, and staff who walk through a sensor-equipped entrance are neither a known threat nor a missing person — and their image is gone before they finish their first step inside the door.
Why Hospitals Are Critical to the Recovery Network
Healthcare facilities are among the highest-probability contact points for missing and endangered persons in the United States. The emergency department in particular sees trafficking victims, dementia patients who have wandered from care, missing children brought in for treatment, and endangered adults fleeing dangerous situations. Without RVIS, those individuals walk in and walk out unidentified. With RVIS, every entry-point scan searches for them automatically.
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Trafficking Victims in the Emergency Department
Research indicates that 68% to 88% of trafficking victims encounter a healthcare provider during their exploitation. The emergency department is the most common point of contact. A trafficking victim brought to the ED for treatment by her captor — under a false name, with a manufactured story — can be identified by RVIS at the entrance against NCMEC, NamUs, and LE-designated missing-person records. The verified alert routes to security and law enforcement without alerting the trafficker.
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Silver Alert Elders Presenting at Hospital Entrances
Dementia patients who wander from home or from a memory care facility frequently present at hospital emergency departments — sometimes brought in by a Good Samaritan, sometimes wandering in alone. Silver Alert designations in the UMbRA database enable RVIS identification at the moment of entry, often before triage even begins. The family is reunited, the originating agency is notified, and the patient is kept safe.
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Missing Children Brought in for Treatment
NCMEC-listed children may be brought to a hospital for treatment of a real or fabricated illness by an abductor. RVIS compares every entry against the NCMEC database. A child listed as missing who enters a sensor-equipped facility is identified within 60 seconds — the verified alert reaches hospital security with the reporting agency's contact information, while the child is still in the building.
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Endangered Adults and Domestic Violence Cases
Adults reported missing under suspicious circumstances, individuals fleeing domestic violence situations who seek medical care under stress, and persons subject to active welfare checks who have not been located can all be identified at the moment they enter a sensor-equipped facility — without depending on the front-desk clerk having read the BOLO or the off-duty officer having remembered the photograph.
- The dual mission does not change the privacy architecture — 99.99%+ of individuals who pass through a sensor-equipped entrance are neither a known threat nor a missing person. Their image is deleted instantly.
- The dual mission means more matching but the same deletion — the same non-match handling, the same zero-data footprint, the same absence of any patient identifier or clinical context.
- RVIS databases are sourced exclusively from law enforcement and federally recognized missing person systems — NCMEC, NamUs, and LE-designated cases. No social media, no commercial data, no crowdsourced reports.
- Every record in RVIS has a law enforcement case number, a reporting agency, and an investigative point of contact — complete chain of custody for any verified match.
- RVIS cannot be disabled — this is a feature, not a limitation. Your hospital can never be in a position where threat detection was prioritized over the recovery of a missing child or a trafficking victim.
Your Security Infrastructure Is Already a Recovery Network.
Schedule a Dual-Mission Briefing. See how RTIS and RVIS work together on every sensor, every scan, every time — with no additional hardware, no additional cost, and no way to turn it off. Your hospital becomes a high-probability recovery point for trafficking victims, missing children, Silver Alert elders, and endangered adults the moment the first sensor goes live.