Thursday, 18 July 2013

Big Brother is Tracking All Cars - The Bill of Rights is Abolished



'You are being tracked'
ACLU reveals docs of mass license plate reader surveillance



The American Police State  -  The Death of the Republic is an amazing thing to watch.  Republican, Democrat, liberal, conservative; it does not matter.  Both parties are pissing on the Bill of Rights in full, fearless view of the public and eagerly building and funding an Orwellian Police State that listens to your every phone call, reads your text messages and tracks your car.

The American Civil Liberties Union has released documents confirming that police license plate readers capture vast amounts of data on innocent people, and in many instances this intelligence is kept forever.

According to documents obtained through a number of Freedom of Information Act requests filed by ACLU offices across the United States, law enforcement agencies are tracking the whereabouts of innocent persons en masse by utilizing a still up-and-coming technology.

Declared an Enemy of the State
Both political parties want Snowden in prison for
the "crime" of telling the truth about 1984.

License place readers are among the latest items being regularly added to the arsenal of law enforcement gizmos and gadgets, but documents obtained through the FOIA requests have prompted the ACLU to acknowledge that safeguards that would properly protect the privacy of Americans are largely absent reports RT News.

When a police department deploys license plate readers on top of patrol cars or at fixed locations, it lets officers see a snapshot of every vehicle that passes by a particular point.

From there, that information can be matched against a database that contains automobiles involved in criminal investigations or cars whose owners may already be in trouble with the law.

According to the ACLU, though, the data that’s collected and routinely stored reveal much more than the location of suspected scofflaws.

At first the captured plate data was used just to check against lists of cars law enforcement hoped to locate for various reasons,” ACLU staff attorney Catherine Crump wrote on the non-profit group’s website Wednesday morning. “But increasingly, all of this data is being fed into massive databases that contain the location information of many millions of innocent Americans stretching back for months or even years.”

Crump and company filed FOIA requests to agencies in 38 states and Washington, DC compelling police departments there to provide them with information detailing their use of license plate readers. In response, the ACLU received 26,000 pages of information that it has analyzed and now made public.

Also see our article:  CIA-DHS Build a Massive License-Plate Reader Data Base.


Big Brother Watch
Automatic Tag Readers, coming to a Parking Lot near You









 

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