Scanner Reads License Plates -- Searches for Law Breakers

Shurnuff

5 More Years Bitches!!
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LITTLE ROCK (AP) - The Pulaski County Sheriff's Department is using a new system that scans license plates of passing cars, checking up to 800 vehicles per hour to see if any are stolen or if the owners are subjects of warrants.

Sheriff Doc Holladay said the unit known as Mobile Plate Hunter 900 is the first of its kind to be used in Arkansas.

"It will allow us to impact the overall crime rate," Holladay said. "It is going to help us to quickly solve those kinds of cases of wanted persons and stolen vehicles."

The scanner system cost $20,000 and was paid for through donations from four insurance companies.

Holladay said the system, which was put into use on Tuesday, can read plates of cars going as fast as 75 mph.


The scanner system includes two infrared cameras that are attached to a patrol car. Inside the car is a dashboard computer and a processor is in the trunk. The system can read plates as the cruiser is moving, scanning plates of parked and moving vehicles.

The license numbers are checked through the FBI's National Crime Information Center to see if the vehicle is stolen or related to someone with an arrest warrant. The system will also reveal whether a missing person is connected with the vehicle.

If there is a hit, the system uses an audio alert to inform the deputy.

"He can make a stop, or call for assistance, identify the driver and hopefully recover the stolen vehicle or wanted person," Holladay said.

State Insurance Commissioner Julie Benafield Bowman helped organize a pilot program that provided the scanner to Pulaski County. She said stolen vehicles cost insurance companies money and drive up the cost of auto insurance.

The system was developed by New York-based ELSAG North America, originally for the Italian postal service as a way to sort mail, chief executive officer Mark Windover said. The system is now used in 28 states by 300 different law enforcement agencies, Windover said.

"This tool has been very effective at finding stolen vehicles," he said. "Over the past three years, our agency partners have found over 4,000 stolen vehicles."

Last year, Pulaski County had 280 vehicles reported stolen, and 155 were recovered, officials said.


Holladay said the system will be used for more than just finding stolen cars.

"We will be arresting people who have outstanding warrants because that is our duty. Once we become aware that a warrant is there, we can't ignore that fact," he said. "But particularly, we are going to use this vehicle to identify auto thieves, people wanted for felony crimes, those kinds of things that directly impact the crime rate."

Story Highlights
-- Scanner reads passing car license plates, going as fast as 75 mph
-- Used to identify stolen cars or if the owers are subjects of warrants
-- System now in use within 28 states


:eek::eek::eek::eek:
 
LITTLE ROCK (AP) - The Pulaski County Sheriff's Department is using a new system that scans license plates of passing cars, checking up to 800 vehicles per hour to see if any are stolen or if the owners are subjects of warrants.

Sheriff Doc Holladay said the unit known as Mobile Plate Hunter 900 is the first of its kind to be used in Arkansas.

"It will allow us to impact the overall crime rate," Holladay said. "It is going to help us to quickly solve those kinds of cases of wanted persons and stolen vehicles."

The scanner system cost $20,000 and was paid for through donations from four insurance companies.

Holladay said the system, which was put into use on Tuesday, can read plates of cars going as fast as 75 mph.


The scanner system includes two infrared cameras that are attached to a patrol car. Inside the car is a dashboard computer and a processor is in the trunk. The system can read plates as the cruiser is moving, scanning plates of parked and moving vehicles.

The license numbers are checked through the FBI's National Crime Information Center to see if the vehicle is stolen or related to someone with an arrest warrant. The system will also reveal whether a missing person is connected with the vehicle.

If there is a hit, the system uses an audio alert to inform the deputy.

"He can make a stop, or call for assistance, identify the driver and hopefully recover the stolen vehicle or wanted person," Holladay said.

State Insurance Commissioner Julie Benafield Bowman helped organize a pilot program that provided the scanner to Pulaski County. She said stolen vehicles cost insurance companies money and drive up the cost of auto insurance.

The system was developed by New York-based ELSAG North America, originally for the Italian postal service as a way to sort mail, chief executive officer Mark Windover said. The system is now used in 28 states by 300 different law enforcement agencies, Windover said.

"This tool has been very effective at finding stolen vehicles," he said. "Over the past three years, our agency partners have found over 4,000 stolen vehicles."

Last year, Pulaski County had 280 vehicles reported stolen, and 155 were recovered, officials said.


Holladay said the system will be used for more than just finding stolen cars.

"We will be arresting people who have outstanding warrants because that is our duty. Once we become aware that a warrant is there, we can't ignore that fact," he said. "But particularly, we are going to use this vehicle to identify auto thieves, people wanted for felony crimes, those kinds of things that directly impact the crime rate."

Story Highlights
-- Scanner reads passing car license plates, going as fast as 75 mph
-- Used to identify stolen cars or if the owers are subjects of warrants
-- System now in use within 28 states


:eek::eek::eek::eek:

I use the same plates(they rusted round the leters) but with a tinted plate cover and spray.

They work for the red light cameras, dont know about this shit, might have to step up my "I am supposed to be free leave me the fuck alone game!!!!!!!!"
 
I use the same plates(they rusted round the leters) but with a tinted plate cover and spray.

They work for the red light cameras, dont know about this shit, might have to step up my "I am supposed to be free leave me the fuck alone game!!!!!!!!"

:lol::lol::lol::lol:
 
I don't see the problem with this. Unless they start profiling certain cars.
But if you are clean you shouldn't have a problem.
 
I don't see the problem with this. Unless they start profiling certain cars.
But if you are clean you shouldn't have a problem.

That is how it starts. Why do people always use the "if you aint doing wrong" shit as a defense.

It will not stop crime, it will harass low income hard working people that have to choose between paying the bills or some trumped up 150$ ticket.

They been doing fine since cars been invented, please stop it with the "saving us devices and laws".

We pay insurance for uninsured drivers, us law abiding citizens are good. We got comprehensive for our stolen cars. We are good.

Just RESPOND TO CALLS, stop with the TRAFFIC WARRANT trying to generate income. That is all this is for.

So they can catch those "low income folks", or high income(that dont pay tickets) and get that fuckign money.

Has nothing to do with crime, how this will get the response rate to 911 calls up is beyond me.

Most the problems are on FOOT anyway, and they sure wont be using this on white folks in rush hour, cause they violate more traffic laws than anybody.

It will be "hood" orientated. More police state shit.

I know rush hour grids where they can come up, but the leave them alone cause white folks would complain..............................focus on the hood is where the get the money.
 
That is how it starts. Why do people always use the "if you aint doing wrong" shit as a defense.

It will not stop crime, it will harass low income hard working people that have to choose between paying the bills or some trumped up 150$ ticket.

They been doing fine since cars been invented, please stop it with the "saving us devices and laws".

We pay insurance for uninsured drivers, us law abiding citizens are good. We got comprehensive for our stolen cars. We are good.

Just RESPOND TO CALLS, stop with the TRAFFIC WARRANT trying to generate income. That is all this is for.

So they can catch those "low income folks", or high income(that dont pay tickets) and get that fuckign money.

Has nothing to do with crime, how this will get the response rate to 911 calls up is beyond me.

Most the problems are on FOOT anyway, and they sure wont be using this on white folks in rush hour, cause they violate more traffic laws than anybody.

It will be "hood" orientated. More police state shit.

I know rush hour grids where they can come up, but the leave them alone cause white folks would complain..............................focus on the hood is where the get the money.


Eh....well it's not different than running through a roadblock. If there's one thing i'm gonna make sure I do is pay my insurance..and if I get a ticket pay that bitch. I can't be without my license...fuck that. I bet if you had a car stolen and recovered using this method you wouldn't have a problem with it.

BTW I can't speak for anywhere else, but most roadblocks I run through in ATL aren't "hood" locations. More like high crime areas...hell where they NEED to be..to keep it real. Folks kill me sometimes...you got folks that complain about the crime in places..but don't want the police to do shit.

True enough I don't care much for SOME police but I know at the end of the day if somethin goes wrong most niggas aint gonna be on some vigilante shit...they gonna call them SAME police they talk shit about. Why, because it's their purpose. Wanna know what its like to live without em...move to Iraq.
 
I've already been pulled over in Ohio by one, I am originally from california and my license plate is an ohio ohio. I was pissed cause he just ran my information and let me go. Profiling like a muthafucka
 
Nothing new. We've had those in D.C. for about a year now. In addition to fixed and mobile Speed/GATCO cams that snap your picture when you're going over the speed limit. And also Red Light cameras.

Needless to say, if there's a way to make a buck through traffic enforcement, D.C. will find a way to squeeze it out of you.
 
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