Just before midnight earlier this month, a robber pulled a gun on two patrons outside the Little Six Casino in Prior Lake. He ran off with their wallets -- and unwittingly left behind a trail of digital surveillance images showing his face and the license plate of his girlfriend's car for security officers to see.
Within hours, a St. Bonifacius man became the latest suspected criminal that Mystic Lake casino surveillance experts have helped nab there and at Little Six.
With state-of-the-art equipment and constant vigilance, Mystic Lake's surveillance division has become a quasi law enforcement agency in its own right, helping to solve crimes from Scott County to St. Cloud.
Its 49 surveillance experts help metro police and FBI agents track and bust criminals who enter the tribal resort complex, from the casinos and hotel to a health club and stores.
"We want our tribal community and our enterprises to be safe for our guests, employees and tribal members," tribal Chairman Stanley R. Crooks said. "This technology is another tool for the tribal government to use."
Mystic Lake's surveillance system is the first of its kind in Minnesota and a model for other casinos nationwide, industry experts say.
The latest installment is a computerized camera system typically used by police for instant scanning of license plates and identification of stolen cars and scofflaws linked to certain vehicles.
Police and prosecutors say the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community Gaming Enterprise helps law enforcement to find and convict bank robbers, spouse beaters and drug felons. The specialists helped take down, for example, a ring responsible for 22 residential burglaries in Prior Lake last November and numerous other break-ins across the metro area.