Author Topic: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.  (Read 324 times)

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Offline powderman

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ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« on: March 03, 2013, 03:38:33 AM »
Arkansas police photograph license plates, store data  Published March 03, 2013
Associated Press     
  •    Jan. 16, 2013: Little Rock Police Officer Grant Humphries loos at a computer monitor connected to a camera mounted near the rear window of his patrol car in Little Rock, Ark. (AP)
  LITTLE ROCK, Ark. –  Little Rock may not be a likely terrorism target or a gang crime hotspot, but the Arkansas capital has decided to follow the example of high-security cities by expanding electronic surveillance of its streets.
A police car with a device that photographs license plates moves through the city and scans the traffic on the streets, relaying the data it collects to a computer for sifting. Police say the surveillance helps identify stolen cars and drivers with outstanding arrest warrants.
 
It also allows authorities to monitor where average citizens might be at any particular time. That bothers some residents, as well as groups that oppose public intrusions into individual privacy. The groups are becoming more alarmed about license plate tracking as a growing number of police departments acquire the technology.
 
Though authorities in Washington, D.C., London and Chicago conduct extensive electronic surveillance of public areas to detect security threats or deter gang crime, "Today, increasingly, even towns without stoplights have license plate readers," said Catherine Crump, a New York-based staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union.
In Little Rock, even some city officials wonder about keeping data on drivers' movements.
"It bothered me particularly if someone wasn't guilty of a crime or didn't have any active warrants or hadn't committed a crime," city director Ken Richardson said.
 
However, Little Rock Police Chief Stuart Thomas said the law enforcement benefits outweigh any concerns about possible abuse of the information, which, as a public record, is legally available for anyone to see. He said the department may get more of the devices.
"Should that potential of misuse therefore eliminate the capacity of law enforcement to collect data which has a legitimate purpose for the safety of our officers or the appropriateness of enforcement actions? I don't think so," he said.
Little Rock police bought the tracker last year for about $14,000, as interest in the technology began spreading in law enforcement circles. The purchase didn't require city council approval and didn't attract much attention in town.
 
"There was no public notice or anything," police spokeswoman Sgt. Cassandra Davis said.
Richardson said he didn't hear about the device until after it had been collecting data for months. He said he said he hasn't heard many complaints.
"It's hard for you to have a problem with something if you don't know it's going on," he said.
Many Little Rock residents apparently still haven't heard about the surveillance. Angel Weston, 45, said she's glad to hear that police are looking for stolen cars and people with warrants but wondered about keeping logs of citizens' movements.
 
"I don't feel like they should keep the data for six or 12 months," Weston said.
Lawmakers in several states, including Minnesota and Utah, have suggested setting a time limit for their departments, but Little Rock has no policy yet. The department now has a growing archive of license plate photos, along with time stamps and the locations, showing where motorists were at certain times.
 
Privacy advocates worry about the potential uses for such outside law enforcement, from snooping by stalkers and private investigators to businesses that sell personal data.
"Given how few rules are currently on the books to protect our privacy, it's plausible that private investigators and data-mining companies could acquire this location data," Crump said. So far, the organization has requested more information from government agencies, but hasn't filed any lawsuits, Crump said.
 
Little Rock's license plate reader is mounted in Officer Grant Humphries' patrol car. He said it's led to dozens of arrests and the recovery of a number of stolen vehicles and vehicles and license plates, although the exact number isn't known.
As Humphries drives around town, a laptop processes the license plate numbers being photographed and emits a sound and flashes red when it finds a match.
On a recent drive, Humphries fell in behind an SUV and pulled it over after the laptop went off.
 
Moments later, he and another officer arrested passenger Montague Martin, who was wanted on outstanding warrants.
As he sat handcuffed in the back of the patrol car, Martin said he thought the license plate reader was a good idea.
"I'm not mad at what they're doing," Martin said before Humphries drove him to jail. "They're doing their job. I just didn't pay my ticket on time."

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/03/03/ark-police-photograph-license-plates-store-data/#ixzz2MUHxj4u0
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Offline LONGTOM

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Re: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« Reply #1 on: March 03, 2013, 04:12:54 AM »
Muddy plates makes it hard for the readers to scan the numbers.
For trucks, always try to park nose in first and drop your tailgait down all the way.
On many trucks this will mostly cover the plate so that they would have to get out to read it.
You can't beat all of it all the time but you can make it harder on them.
Same thing goes for the mud on the front plate for those red light cameras!
No law against a muddy plate, yet!
It does work.
 
 
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Offline BBF

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Re: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« Reply #2 on: March 03, 2013, 08:18:18 AM »
My Province only issues one plate. ;D
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Offline grdad45

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Re: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« Reply #3 on: March 03, 2013, 06:05:48 PM »
Arkansas has rear plates only. Back into parking places when you can.
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Offline nw_hunter

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Re: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« Reply #4 on: March 03, 2013, 09:42:58 PM »
“Liberty is lost through complacency and a subservient mindset. When we accept or even welcome automobile checkpoints, random searches, mandatory identification cards, and paramilitary police in our streets, we have lost a vital part of our American heritage. America was born of protest, revolution, and mistrust of government. Subservient societies neither maintain nor deserve freedom for long.”~ Ron Paul ;)
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Offline guzzijohn

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Re: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« Reply #5 on: March 04, 2013, 03:07:36 AM »
Quote from longtom:
"No law against a muddy plate, yet!"


There is in Kansas. Not just mud but anything that obscures any of the plate. A coworker has been stopped and given a warning by a state trooper for having mud covering part of her plate.
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Offline FPH

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Re: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« Reply #6 on: March 04, 2013, 03:59:52 AM »
They sell a  plate cover that looks fine to the naked eye but when photographed obscures the numbers.

Offline jhm

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Re: ARK police photograph license plates, store data.
« Reply #7 on: March 04, 2013, 06:28:15 AM »
     Dont ever get to thinking Little Rock is a safe place to be, it is one of the danger zones where GANG violence is rampent, when we have to go there we carry Xtra mags, and hope to never need them, not someplace you would want to take a walk in the park anymore.  Not to justify the use of cameras by the police though.  Jim