MOUNTAIN VIEW – Federal agencies in 2024 accessed data from a camera in this city’s Flock Safety automated license plate reader system – something that the Mountain View Police Department says was ...
In more than 125 cities and counties across Michigan, nondescript cameras perched near busy roadways snap a picture every ...
Mountain View has shut off its Flock Safety license plate readers over concerns that outside agencies were able to access the ...
If you drive on area roads, chances are good your license plate has been photographed and entered into a database run by a private company and used by law enforcement.
Mountain View's police chief said Monday that the city's license plate reader cameras will be turned off until the City Council decides whether to keep them operating in the city.
All of Mountain View's license plate cameras are being disabled, effective immediately, Police Chief Mike Canfield announced ...
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Coralville sharing its license plate data raises community concern
Coralville is sharing data from its Flock license plate database with Cedar Rapids after a manual access request by the ...
Local News Matters on MSN
Mountain View police say feds make 'unauthorized' use of license plate reader
Mountain View police criticized the company supplying its automated license plate reader system after an audit turned up ...
Twin Falls police expanded their license plate reader network to 40 cameras, helping catch dangerous criminals but raising ...
Caldwell police call license plate readers "another tool" as they expand surveillance, but residents raise privacy and ...
Flock Safety has begun removing license plate reader cameras from Springfield streets.
Whether it’s a quick trip to the store or a drive back into town after a weekend away, everyday travel in Little Falls could ...
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