Florida Town to Use Surveillance Cameras
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, April 27, 2004
MANALAPAN, Fla. One of the nation's wealthiest towns will
soon have cameras and computers running background checks on every
car and driver that passes through.
Police Chief Clay Walker said cameras would take infrared photos
recording a car's tag number, then software will automatically run
the numbers through law enforcement databases. A 911 dispatcher is
alerted if the car is stolen or is the subject of a "be on the
lookout" warning.
Next to the tag number, police will have a picture of the
driver, taken with another set of cameras, upgraded versions of
the standard surveillance cameras already in place.
If there is a robbery, police will be able to comb records to
determine who drove through town on a given afternoon or evening.
"Courts have ruled that in a public area, you have no
expectation of privacy," said Walker, one of 11 sworn officers who
protects Manalapan's 321 residents. Still, Walker says Manalapan's
data would be destroyed every three months.
Manalapan's town council authorized $60,000 in security upgrades
last week after three burglaries this winter robbed residents of
$400,000 in jewelry. The town averages two or three burglaries a year, and residents demanded swift response, Town Manager Gregory
Dunham said.
The 2000 Census listed Manalapan, about 15 miles south of West
Palm Beach, among the nation's richest cities, with two out of
every three homes worth more than $500,000.
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