---
title: "Aiken County Sheriff Asks Residents to Register Home Security Cameras for Investigations"
url: https://www.hereaiken.com/2026/05/29/aiken-sheriff-camera-connect-registry/
date: 2026-05-29T18:42:36+00:00
modified: 2026-05-29T18:44:15+00:00
author: ""
categories: ["Crime"]
site: "HERE Aiken"
attribution: "HERE Aiken"
---

# Aiken County Sheriff Asks Residents to Register Home Security Cameras for Investigations

> Aiken County's Camera Connect program lets homeowners voluntarily share Ring or Nest footage when nearby crimes occur. Registration is free and opt-in.

*Source: [HERE Aiken](https://www.hereaiken.com/2026/05/29/aiken-sheriff-camera-connect-registry/) — May 29, 2026 by *

**Aiken County deputies are urging residents to register Ring, Nest, and other home security cameras with the sheriff’s *Camera Connect* program**, an opt-in registry that lets investigators request footage from nearby cameras during active crime investigations.

Registration does not give the sheriff’s office live access to any feed. When an incident occurs nearby, deputies email the registered owner and ask whether the camera captured relevant footage. The homeowner decides whether to share.

### How to register

- Visit the Aiken County Sheriff’s Office community page and follow the *Camera Connect* link.

- Provide the camera’s approximate street address and your contact email.

- Cameras facing public streets, alleys, and driveways are the most useful for investigators.

### Why it matters

In the last 18 months, Aiken County investigators credited residential camera footage — voluntarily shared by registered participants — with developing leads in package thefts, vehicle break-ins, and several hit-and-run cases. The program is free and can be canceled at any time.

*This is a community advisory post. For specific incident reporting, dial 911 (emergency) or 803-648-6811 (non-emergency).*

### What investigators want to see

Sheriff’s deputies emphasize that **any camera facing the street is potentially useful** — even a low-cost doorbell camera. The most common evidence requests involve front-yard package thefts in subdivisions near Whiskey Road, vehicle break-ins at apartment complexes off Silver Bluff Road, and hit-and-run incidents along Pine Log Road and the Aiken Bypass (SC 118).

Cameras with wide field-of-view (170° or wider) and clear nighttime visibility tend to provide the most usable footage. Standard 1080p resolution is sufficient — investigators are looking for license plates, vehicle colors, clothing, and direction of travel rather than facial features.

### Privacy protections

The Aiken County Camera Connect program is designed to protect homeowner privacy:

- **No live access** — deputies cannot view your camera feed at any time.

- **Opt-in only** — you receive a request via email and decide whether to respond.

- **No obligation** — declining a footage request has no legal consequence.

- **Cancellation** — you can remove your camera from the registry by emailing the sheriff’s communications office.

### Related Aiken County safety resources

- Aiken Public Safety Center — non-emergency: 803-642-7620

- South Carolina Crime Stoppers — anonymous tips: 1-888-CRIME-SC

- SLED Sex Offender Registry — searchable by zip code at sled.sc.gov

Residents of incorporated areas (City of Aiken proper, North Augusta, Wagener, New Ellenton) should also check whether their municipal police department offers a similar registry. The City of Aiken Department of Public Safety operates a separate “See Something, Send Something” community camera initiative.
