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The Odessa American is the leading source of local news, information, entertainment and sports for the Permian Basin.
The widespread acceptance of automated license plate readers as a crime-fighting tool only magnifies enables routine surveillance of a sort that would have troubled the Fourth Amendment's framers.
The grant covers $3,000 dollars, for each reader for the first year in the program. Partial financial assistance to the ...
Redmond Police Department announced Tuesday that in an effort to improve public safety, they have installed Automated License ...
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (WJHG/WECP) -On Monday, Panama City Commissioners approved an ordinance to add speed detection systems to ...
Anne Arundel County reported significant declines in major crime over the past year, the police department said Wednesday.
Activists pressure payment processors, who in turn pressure game marketplaces. The result? A whole lot of video games and ...
Today in Ohio podcast discusses the "overkill" security measures at Geauga County Fair while questioning why lawmakers won't ...
The city says the cameras are intended to fight crime. Some residents worry they could be used to aid in federal immigration ...
The city of Huntington Beach quietly signed two contracts in April to install 10 high-tech surveillance cameras trained on ...