Return to Virginia Business - July 2004

Around the Old Dominion

High intrigue and high profits

Virginia Business
July 2004

Sytech Corp. normally provides its surveillance and intercept technology to national intelligence and drug enforcement agencies, but with a push into the homeland security market after 9/11, this Alexandria-based firm has been growing its reputation among local law enforcement units. Which is why Baltimore police knew exactly who to call last year after an 11-year-old girl was kidnapped. When the kidnapper began making ransom demands, cops asked to borrow one of Sytech’s Advanced Analog and Digital Collection Systems, a cell phone intercept device. “They were able to catch the guy within hours,” says CEO Jose Diaz.

In fact, the company’s deep knowledge of this type of cloak-and-dagger technology has also enabled it to solve one of the biggest hurdles for the front lines of homeland security: getting different radio and phone systems
to communicate. “We know how to intercept all these things, so we just modified what we were doing so we could translate data from one device to another,” Diaz explains.

The Radio Interoperability System (RIOS) 3001 allows first responders to talk to each other, whether they’re using a cell phone, a two-way radio or a satellite phone. In other words, a police chief can sit in his office on a cell phone and talk to 20 different personnel from 10 different counties using all different types of traditional and not-so-traditional emergency communication equipment. The product was used very successfully at this year’s Super Bowl in Houston, and now demand is so high, says Diaz that “we can’t build them fast enough.”

Not surprisingly, this new breakthrough is boosting revenues. Since 2002, Sytech, a minority-owned business with 150 employees, has enjoyed a solid growth rate of more than of 80 percent.

Return to Virginia Business - July 2004