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Angry Norfolk Residents Lose Lawsuit to Stop Flock License Plate Scanners
Judge Davis found Norfolk's clustered Flock cameras, capturing vehicle data retained for 21 days, do not constitute a warrantless search under the Fourth Amendment.
Summary by Ars Technica
6 Articles
6 Articles
Federal judge sides with city of Norfolk in Flock camera lawsuit
A federal judge in Norfolk sided with the city on Tuesday in a lawsuit alleging that its use of Flock license plate reading cameras is a violation of Fourth Amendment rights.Norfolk's Automated License Plate Recognition (APLR) camera network operates nearly 200 cameras in the city, which capture images of plates and can employ their use in crime investigations.In his decision, U.S. District Judge Mark Davis cites other court rulings at the state…
Coverage Details
Total News Sources6
Leaning Left0Leaning Right1Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution80% Center
Bias Distribution
- 80% of the sources are Center
80% Center
C 80%
R 20%
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