pdComp gets 175 charges and 90 citations in new add-on
pdComp’s new add-on drops 175 charges and 90 citations into the MDT, turning stops, arrests and court follow-up into a fuller records workflow.
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pdComp’s legal menu got a lot bigger overnight. ufwfrosty’s More Charges and Citations for PdComp landed on May 13, 2026 as version 1.0.0, and the data-only add-on adds 175 charges and 90 citations to the police computer built for Grand Theft Auto V and LSPDFR. For players who use the MDT as more than a novelty, that is the difference between a bare-bones stop report and a system that can keep pace when a traffic stop turns into an arrest, a penalty, or a court case.
The pack is optimized for pdComp - Police Computer 0.1.5, and ufwfrosty said the files were edited and worked around specifically for pdComp rather than forced over from a different setup. That matters because the author is trying to expand the normal charge and citation lists, not replace them with something incompatible. Installation is intentionally light-touch too, with a drag-and-drop setup and a readme that explains the process. In practice, that should make the pack easier to slot into the same workflow that already manages patrol records, instead of turning it into another mod that requires tinkering every time the database changes.
The appeal is not flashy. It is operational. pdComp already handles pedestrian lookup, vehicle lookup, citation issuing, arrest reporting, court docket tracking and persistent JSON-backed history, with optional deep integration through Policing Redefined and the Common Data Framework. CossackGames also says the system can surface CDF-driven statuses such as expired registration, insurance lapses, suspended permits, wanted flags and linked records. Add 175 charges and 90 citations on top of that, and the computer becomes much better suited to the messy reality of a stop where one violation leads to another. A simple traffic incident can now support more believable citations, more detailed arrest paperwork and a cleaner handoff into hearings and case tracking.

That is where the real workflow expansion shows up for LSPDFR users. The old frustration with police computer mods has often been repetition, the same small pool of charges every time a stop escalates. A larger catalog does not remove that task, but it makes it less repetitive and more believable, especially when officers want to build out roleplay around warrants, suspended paperwork, insurance problems or linked offenses. It also puts pdComp in a line of tools that have tried to make GTA policing feel more administrative and connected, from LSPDFR Computer+ with its search, citation and court functions to ExternalPoliceComputer, which pushed MDT access onto devices on a home network and integrated Policing Redefined support. In that context, ufwfrosty’s pack is the kind of release that makes pdComp feel less like a gadget and more like the center of a real patrol desk.
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