LPC wrote:I don't know how widespread those systems might be, but it would make it impossible to drive an stolen, uninsured, or unregistered vehicle for any length of time.
As I read that, my memory was jogged about something I'd read recently. So, I looked for it.
Sure enough, 9 days ago the Boston PD suspended its use of scanners. They had "inadvertently" disclosed 68,000 plate numbers. So, the usual privacy scolds were up in arms.
Now, I support privacy as much as anyone, but there is a public interest in catching miscreants, especially felons.
Problem is, the argument that scanners will enable us to "find those crooks" or that scanners "would make it impossible to drive an stolen, uninsured, or unregistered vehicle for any length of time" doesn't seem to hold much, if any water, at least not in Boston.
As the article said:
One motorcycle that had been reported stolen triggered scanner alerts 59 times over six months, while another plate with lapsed insurance was scanned a total of 97 times in the same span.
10 to 15 times
per month got no result. One might have thought that once was enough.
And:
Boston police chief technical officer John Daley indicated that each of these scans prompted an e-mail alert to the department’s Stolen Car Unit, but there is no indication that the motorcycle was ever apprehended or even stopped.
<snip>
It is unclear what Boston police have done with their mountain of scans, in part because police did not keep records of follow-ups on the data.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/1 ... story.html
Well, OK, then. Close enough for government work, eh? Why should anyone expect anything else? After all, it's just the government and it's all for our own good.
These cameras/scanners are both on moving vehicles and in fixed locations. About 20% of police departments nationwide use them, probably soon to be a lot more. I can't wait.
The Boston results are enough to make you wonder why these scanners exist, since they don't seem to be doing much in the way of arrests or stolen property recovery. Never mind citations for driving without insurance or vehicle registration.
There's only one circumstance that I know of where scanners are effective and justifiable. Some cable channel has (or had, I haven't seen it recently) a show about Philadelphia parking meter cops who drive around in vehicles that can scan every parked car's plate.
They find the vehicles of those who can't be bothered to pay their previous (usually numerous) tickets and boot them. Immobilization almost always results in a lot of yelling and screaming. It's a bitch when you're a scofflaw and get caught.
That scanner program has a reason to exist, actually works and is totally justifiable.
All the States incorporated daughter corporations for transaction of business in the 1960s or so. - Some voice in Van Pelt's head, circa 2006.