https://tenthamendmentcenter.com/2020/06/27/document-unmasks-fusion-centers-participation-in-license-plate-surveillance/


Document Unmasks Fusion Center’s Participation in License Plate Surveillance
By: Mike Maharrey|Published on: Jun 27, 2020|Categories:A document pulled from 
the BlueLeaks trove reveals the Northern California Regional Intelligence 
Center (NCRIC) collects automatic license plate reader (ALPR) information and 
stores it for up to a year, making it accessible to government agencies across 
the country.The Tenth Amendment Center has long suspected that fusion centers 
serve as surveillance data collection hubs. The NCRIC document confirms this 
and additionally reveals that the center owns surveillance technology it makes 
available to law enforcement agencies in its region.
NCRIC is one of 78 fusion centers across the United States. Although states own 
and operate their fusion centers, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security 
facilitates and coordinates their activities. According to the DHS website, 
“The National Network of Fusion Centers is the hub of much of the two-way 
intelligence and information flow between the federal government and our State, 
Local, Tribal and Territorial (SLTT) and private sector partners. The fusion 
centers represent a shared commitment between the federal government and the 
state and local governments who own and operate them.”

The Tenth Amendment Center obtained NCRIC’s ALPR policy through a search of the 
BlueLeaks database. Distributed Denial of Secrets (DDoSecrets) published a 
269-gigabyte collection of police department data that includes emails, memos, 
videos, audio files and law enforcement documents. In a tweet, DDoSecrets said 
the trove includes “ten years of data from over 200 police departments, fusion 
centers and other law enforcement training and support resources,”. The 
searchable database contains over 1 million files.

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