Privacy concerns raised over proliferation of license plate cameras
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[March 14, 2022]
By Kevin Bessler | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – As Illinois police
departments lobby city councils on the importance of cameras to combat
crime, some are raising concerns about the right to privacy.
The American Civil Liberties Unions has released a report on Flock
Safety, a company that sells license plate reading camera systems to
taxing bodies. The ACLU report looks at how the technology is building a
form of mass surveillance never seen before in American life.
Flock systems have been installed in 1,400 cities across the country and
photograph more than a billion vehicles every month. Its ambition is to
expand to “every single city in America.”
“We are concerned about all of this massive influx of technology over
the last year or so and the question of what really happens to it and
ultimately utilized,” said Ed Yohnka, director of communications and
public policy with ACLU of Illinois.
Champaign and Peoria are using the technology.
In Springfield, taxpayers are paying $415,000 for 83 cameras to be
installed in certain areas of the city.
Bloomington city leaders this month voted to install the license plate
cameras despite opposition from the Central Illinois chapter of the
ACLU.
Yohnka said company officials are using fear as a way to sell their
products.
“The marketers of these systems are telling local leaders that they can
adopt these systems in order to fight a recent spike in gun violence,”
Yohnka said. “There’s actually no evidence that it works that way or
that it will help in terms of that.”
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The report notes if Flock cameras become as widespread and densely
placed as the company hopes, law enforcement will gain the ability to
know the detailed movements of virtually any vehicle for as far in the
past as the data is held.
“The risk of abuse by government is all too real," the reports says.
"Unfortunately, this country has a long tradition, extending up to the
present, of law enforcement targeting people not because they’re
suspected of criminal activity but because of their political or
religious beliefs or race. There are also many documented instances of
individual officers abusing police databases."
In some communities, there is an agreement that images captured by the
cameras remain in the system for 30 days before automatically being
deleted by the company.
The systems aren’t just being implemented by police agencies across the
state. Flock Safety sales representative Dan Murdoch told leaders in
Springfield in December that more than half their business is with the
private sector like big-box retailers, homeowners' associations and
other places.
“Rivers Casinos just put in a dozen of these cameras,” Murdoch said.
“Des Plaines has access to those for free.”
Murdoch said the systems are also integrated with FBI, Illinois State
Police, stolen vehicle databases, Amber or Silver alert lists and other
systems.
Yohnka said it is important that there are a set of rules put in place
before a city decides to install the cameras.
“What is really required here is that communities and local law
enforcement put in place very strict privacy policies in advance before
ever adopting these kinds of systems,” Yohnka said.
Kevin Bessler reports on statewide issues in Illinois for
the Center Square. He has over 30 years of experience in radio news
reporting throughout the Midwest. |