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License-plate readers let police collect millions of records on drivers
CIRO ^ | 6/26/13 | Ali Winston

Posted on 06/26/2013 3:04:40 PM PDT by LibWhacker

A license-plate reader mounted on a San Leandro Police Department car can log thousands of plates in an eight-hour patrol shift. “It works 100 times better than driving around looking for license plates with our eyes,” says police Lt. Randall Brandt.

Credit: Michael Katz-Lacabe

When the city of San Leandro, Calif., purchased a license-plate reader for its police department in 2008, computer security consultant Michael Katz-Lacabe asked the city for a record of every time the scanners had photographed his car.

The results shocked him.

The paperback-size device, installed on the outside of police cars, can log thousands of license plates in an eight-hour patrol shift. Katz-Lacabe said it had photographed his two cars on 112 occasions, including one image from 2009 that shows him and his daughters stepping out of his Toyota Prius in their driveway.

That photograph, Katz-Lacabe said, made him “frightened and concerned about the magnitude of police surveillance and data collection.” The single patrol car in San Leandro equipped with a plate reader had logged his car once a week on average, photographing his license plate and documenting the time and location.

At a rapid pace, and mostly hidden from the public, police agencies throughout California have been collecting millions of records on drivers and feeding them to intelligence fusion centers operated by local, state and federal law enforcement.

An image captured by a license-plate reader in 2009 shows Katz-Lacabe and his daughters stepping out of a car in their driveway. The photograph made Katz-Lacabe “frightened and concerned about the magnitude of police surveillance and data collection,” he says.

Credit: San Leandro Police Department photo courtesy of Michael Katz-Lacabe

With heightened concern over secret intelligence operations at the National Security Agency, the localized effort to track drivers highlights the extent to which the government has committed to collecting large amounts of data on people who have done nothing wrong.

A year ago, the Northern California Regional Intelligence Center – one of dozens of law enforcement intelligence-sharing centers set up after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 – signed a $340,000 agreement with the Silicon Valley firm Palantir to construct a database of license-plate records flowing in from police using the devices across 14 counties, documents and interviews show.

The extent of the center’s data collection has never been revealed. Neither has the involvement of Palantir, a Silicon Valley firm with extensive ties to the Pentagon and intelligence agencies. The CIA’s venture capital fund, In-Q-Tel, has invested $2 million in the firm.

The jurisdictions supplying license-plate data to the intelligence center stretch from Monterey County to the Oregon border. According to contract documents, the database will be capable of handling at least 100 million records and be accessible to local and state law enforcement across the region.

Law enforcement agencies throughout Northern California will be able to access the data, as will state and federal authorities.

In the Bay Area, at least 32 government agencies use license-plate readers. The city of Piedmont decided to install them along the border with Oakland, and the Marin County enclave of Tiburon placed plate scanners and cameras on two roads leading into and out of town.

Law enforcement agencies throughout the region also have adopted the technology. Police in Daly City, Milpitas and San Francisco have signed agreements to provide data from plate readers to the Northern California Regional Intelligence Center. A Piedmont document indicates that city is also participating, along with Oakland, Walnut Creek, Alameda and the California Highway Patrol.

Katz-Lacabe said he believes the records of his movements are too revealing for someone who has done nothing wrong. With the technology, he said, “you can tell who your friends are, who you hang out with, where you go to church, whether you’ve been to a political meeting.”

Lt. Randall Brandt of the San Leandro police said, “It’s new technology, we’re learning as we go, but it works 100 times better than driving around looking for license plates with our eyes.”

The intelligence center database will store license-plate records for up to two years, regardless of data retention limits set by local police departments.

Many cities use license-plate readers to enforce parking restrictions or identify motorists who run red lights. Police in New York City have used the readers to catch car thieves and scan parking lots to identify motorists with open warrants.

In California, Long Beach police detectives used scanner data to arrest five people in a 2010 homicide. Plate readers in Tiburon identified celebrity chef Guy Fieri’s yellow Lamborghini in March 2011, which allegedly had been stolen from a San Francisco dealership by a teenager who embarked on a crime spree two years ago and now faces attempted murder charges.

Sid Heal, a retired commander with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, oversaw the adoption of plate readers in his agency in the mid-2000s. Heal recalled the dramatic uptick the plate readers made in the auto theft unit’s productivity.

“We found 10 stolen vehicles on the first weekend in 2005 with our antitheft teams,” Heal said. “I had a hit within 45 minutes.”

Before, Heal said, police had to call license plates in to a dispatcher and wait to have the car verified as stolen. Plate readers, Heal said, “are lightning fast in comparison” and allow officers to run up to 1,200 plates an hour, as opposed to 20 to 50 plates per day previously.

But Jennifer Lynch, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said the Northern California database raises significant privacy concerns. “Because so many people in the Bay Area are mobile, it makes it that much more possible to track people from county to county,” Lynch said.

In May, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, along with the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, sued the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s and Los Angeles Police departments for a week of data gathered and retained in a multiagency network. For now, it’s unknown which agency administers the Los Angeles database, how many agencies contribute or have access to the database, how many records the system retains or how long they are kept.

In San Diego, 13 federal and local law enforcement agencies have compiled more than 36 million license-plate scans in a regional database since 2010 with the help of federal homeland security grants. The San Diego Association of Governments maintains the database. Unlike the Northern California database, which retains the data for between one and two years, the San Diego system retains license-plate information indefinitely.

“License-plate data is clearly identifiable to specific individuals,” said Lee Tien, a senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “This is like having your barcode tracked.”

Few limits on license-plate data

License-plate readers are not subject to the same legal restrictions as GPS devices that can be used to track an individual's movements. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously last year that lengthy GPS tracking constitutes a Fourth Amendment search and may require a warrant.

But plate readers might not fall under such rulings if police successfully argue that motorists have no “reasonable expectation of privacy” while driving on public roads.

Then-California state Sen. Joe Simitian, D-Palo Alto, introduced a bill last year that would have required California police to purge license-plate data after 60 days and applied that rule to companies that collect such data. Law enforcement and private businesses involved in the technology resisted, and the bill died.

“Do we really want to maintain a database that tracks personal movements of law-abiding citizens in perpetuity? That’s the fundamental question here,” said Simitian, now a Santa Clara County supervisor. “Larger and larger amounts of data collected over longer periods of time provide a very detailed look at the personal movements of private citizens.”

While some law enforcement agencies, like the California Highway Patrol, have their own data retention guidelines for license-plate scanners, Simitian said there still is no larger policy that protects the privacy of Californians on the road.

“Public safety and privacy protection are not mutually exclusive,” he said. “There's a balance to be struck, and most people understand that.”

Heal, the retired sheriff’s commander, said that absent clear legal limits on license-plate readers, law enforcement agencies will continue to expand their ability to gather such information.

“A lot of the guidance on this technology – the court doctrine – is nonexistent,” Heal said. “Until that guidance comes, law enforcement is in an exploratory mode.”


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: communism; dontspyonme; govtabuse; license; plate; policestate; privacy; reader; tyranny; waronliberty
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To: MeganC

I just carry around a bucket of mud - works just as well.


41 posted on 06/26/2013 4:59:09 PM PDT by GreyHoundSailor
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To: LibWhacker

ping


42 posted on 06/26/2013 5:06:29 PM PDT by foxpro2
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To: qaz123

Just last month a homicide in my PA county was solved thanks to LPRs deployed by the Missouri State Patrol—got a hit on the fugitive’s vehicle and now he is awaiting extradition.


43 posted on 06/26/2013 5:09:19 PM PDT by lightman (Prosecute the heresies; pity the heretics.)
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To: lightman
That anecdote will make Big Brother's jackboot much softer when it's hammering my face in...
44 posted on 06/26/2013 5:11:09 PM PDT by kiryandil (turning Americans into felons, one obnoxious drunk at a time (Zero Tolerance!!!))
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To: elkfersupper
I'm still wondering why one needs "licenses" for themselves and their vehicles to peaceably travel from place to place. I thought wars were fought and won over this.

They were fought, they were won, and you don't need a license to drive. Per the vehicle code, only commercial vehicles and drivers need licenses.

Of course, the government can (and will) presume you are a commercial driver. And presume, and presume and presume and presume...

45 posted on 06/26/2013 5:15:54 PM PDT by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: MeganC

These “special cams” are NOT part of the CalTrans Traffic Cam system. The cams I commented about are SPY cams.


46 posted on 06/26/2013 5:56:08 PM PDT by TaMoDee ( Lassez les bons temps rouler dans les 2013! Geaux, Pack, Geaux!)
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To: Misterioso

Figures that would be something Satan-in-a-wheelchair would come up with.


47 posted on 06/26/2013 6:25:03 PM PDT by Still Thinking (Freedom is NOT a loophole!)
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To: LibWhacker

I want a portable EMP


48 posted on 06/26/2013 7:06:20 PM PDT by zeugma (Those of us who work for a living are outnumbered by those who vote for a living.)
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To: Adder
Can they be jammed or thwarted?

Print out a picture of the license plate of your local city-hall assemblyman, affix printout to your plates via cellophane-tape, done.

49 posted on 06/26/2013 8:41:46 PM PDT by OneWingedShark (Q: Why am I here? A: To do Justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with my God.)
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To: Talisker

Try not having a license to drive the next time you get pulled over or are involved in a crash. Let us know how that goes.


50 posted on 06/27/2013 1:50:26 AM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: TaMoDee

>> I-10 and I-15 have cameras mounted on poles in the Center Divide from LA to the state borders of NV an AZ. These cameras are not Traffic Cams. <<

They’re here in VA too along I-81.


51 posted on 06/27/2013 6:39:30 AM PDT by appalachian_dweller (Live each day as if it's your last. It might be.)
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To: LibWhacker
It's gotten a little more attention this month:

Fox: Driving somewhere? There's a government record of that

CBS: Study: Government Tracking Movement of Every Vehicle with License Plate

ACLU: Police Documents on License Plate Scanners Reveal Mass Tracking

Chances are, your local or state police departments have photographs of your car in their files, noting where you were driving on a particular day, even if you never did anything wrong.

Using automated scanners, law enforcement agencies across the country have amassed millions of digital records on the location and movement of every vehicle with a license plate, according to a study published Wednesday by the American Civil Liberties Union. Affixed to police cars, bridges or buildings, the scanners capture images of passing or parked vehicles and note their location, uploading that information into police databases. Departments keep the records for weeks or years, sometimes indefinitely.

As the technology becomes cheaper and more ubiquitous, and federal grants focus on aiding local terrorist detection, even small police agencies are able to deploy more sophisticated surveillance systems. While the Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that a judge’s approval is needed to track a car with GPS, networks of plate scanners allow police effectively to track a driver’s location, sometimes several times every day, with few legal restrictions.

Law enforcement officials also point out that the technology is legal in most cases, automating a practice that’s been done for years.

The ACLU found that only five states have laws governing license plate readers. New Hampshire, for example, bans the technology except in narrow circumstances, while Maine and Arkansas limit how long plate information can be stored.

“There’s no expectation of privacy” for a vehicle driving on a public road or parked in a public place, said Lt. Bill Hedgpeth, a spokesman for the Mesquite Police Department in Texas, which has records stretching back to 2008, although the city plans next month to begin deleting files older than two years. “It’s just a vehicle. It’s just a license plate.”


They have them all over the place in Texas, and nobody seems to care.
52 posted on 07/17/2013 12:04:19 PM PDT by af_vet_rr
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To: LibWhacker

Meanwhile, my neighbors have had out of state plates on their cars for over 3 years.


53 posted on 07/17/2013 12:08:22 PM PDT by IamConservative (The soul of my lifes journey is Liberty!)
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To: IamConservative

You can defeat these cameras by spraying a coat of flat clear over the entire plate. Not discernible by the naked eye, but it prevents the reflective qualities of the lettering from triggering the camera.


54 posted on 07/17/2013 12:14:03 PM PDT by IamConservative (The soul of my lifes journey is Liberty!)
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To: af_vet_rr
Thanks for the update. If the Framers had had a crystal ball and could've looked into the future, they would've worded the 4th Amendment differently because it's obvious their concerns were not about unwarranted searches and seizures, per se, but about an all-powerful government sticking its nose into every aspect of the lives of its citizens, monitoring them on a constant fishing expedition for wrongdoing when there was no reason to suspect it. Privacy was a huge concern for them.

But you'd never know that when you hear these high-school dropouts today droning on about there being no expectation of privacy when a person is in public. WRONG! There is an expectation of privacy any time it comes to governmental intrusion into the lives of its law-abiding citizens, monitoring their every move, peeking under their clothes at the airport, peering through the walls of their homes with Big Brother's hi-tech vans that prowl their neighborhoods.

The generation that fought and won WWII for us was great, but not the greatest. The greatest was the generation of Washington and Jefferson. We need them again. But what do we have instead? A generation of mush heads.

55 posted on 07/17/2013 7:58:07 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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