'Stolen car hunter' gives Escondido police an added boost

By: SARAH WILKINS - Staff Writer
Cameras scan license plates against auto theft database | Tuesday, December 25, 2007 8:23 PM PST

NORTH COUNTY -- The round black cameras mounted atop Escondido police Sgt. Don Shumate's patrol car are doing a lot of his work for him these days.

The cameras click rapidly, working constantly to photograph license plates on passing cars and inputting the numbers into an on-board computer, which then runs the number against a database of stolen vehicles.

If a vehicle comes back reported as stolen, the system -- called automated license plate recognition -- emits alerts both audibly and on the computer screen mounted beside the patrol car's steering wheel.

"It's basically a stolen car hunter," said Shumate, whose car captured hundreds of plates as he drove around Escondido one morning earlier this month. "It's looking for those I can't see. It's able to run things the human eye would miss. ... They can be bumper to bumper, and we got it."

Auto theft is a continuing concern in the region, and more than 25,800 vehicles were stolen countywide last year, according to the San Diego County Regional Auto Theft Task Force. With 794 motor vehicle thefts this year through October, Escondido has the highest theft rate in North County and the fifth-highest in the county, county statistics show.

San Diego police have three license plate tracking systems, and have recovered 119 vehicles with them since last year, Detective Brian LeRibus said.

Use of the cameras has drawn some concern from civil rights activists, who said they are worried that the increased use of surveillance technology, without the use of independent oversight, could infringe on citizens' privacy.

"Our main concern is the tremendous power this gives law enforcement to track people," said Kevin Keenan, director of the San Diego and Imperial county chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union. "We all want stolen cars to be found and car thieves to be caught, but this power could be used in other ways."

In response, Shumate stressed that the devices photograph the license plate, not the driver. Furthermore, the cameras are only a tool used to speed up an officer's work, and do not provide any more information than police already have access to, he said.

The county Sheriff's Department now is working to secure funding to put two of the devices in place by next year, Lt. Phil Brust said. The California Highway Patrol is also testing the technology, though it is not in use by the agency's Oceanside office, which handles most of North County, Officer Eric Newbury said.

The system in Escondido uses three cameras mounted atop a patrol car that can capture license plates from 10 to 15 feet away in less than a second. It also scans for vehicles wanted by police or listed by an Amber alert, which is issued for missing children.

The program, developed by United Kingdom-based PIPS Technology, allows officers to check for stolen vehicles much faster than they could with the traditional method, which requires them to relay the license plate number to a dispatcher, who then checks it against the stolen vehicle database.

Shumate described that method as "very tedious."

"When you're behind a possibly stolen car, you have to manually type while driving. It typically takes 30 to 40 seconds," he said. With the reader, he said, "We can read 20 plates in that same time."

The system scans surrounding cars automatically while the patrol car is on, and officers can use other computer programs as the tracker works. If the device detects a stolen car, an alert appears over any other application the computer is doing.

Escondido employs one license plate reading system that was put into place about five months ago at a cost of $25,000, paid for with grant funds. There are no current plans to expand the program, though police will evaluate the system next year to determine whether they will buy more systems, Shumate said.

Since its employment, about 100,000 plates have been scanned, leading to 470 hits for stolen vehicles. Police are working now to track the number of vehicles recovered through the system, and it is still too early to know how successful the technology is, Lt. Bob Benton said.

The use of license plate reading technology has grown quickly in the U.S. over the last three years, and between 75 and 100 law enforcement agencies statewide currently use some type of program, said Greg Lary, vice president of West Coast Operations for PIPS Technology.

"The demand is definitely growing from a law enforcement perspective," he said.

The program is similar to that used to monitor vehicles on toll roads and to count cars for traffic management projects, Lary said. The technology, which is used extensively in the United Kingdom, was initially developed as a way to track vehicles following a 1993 bomb attack in England, he said.

-- Contact staff writer Sarah Wilkins at (760) 740-3524 or swilkins@nctimes.com.

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13 comment(s)[-]Go to Top

Way to go EPD!! wrote on Dec 26, 2007 12:12 AM:Catch those ca thieves!! ACLU get lost! Your loyalties always seem to be to criminals!

Mike From Escondido wrote on Dec 26, 2007 7:07 AM:Money well spent. Let's get the cars back and put the thieves in jail. A couple of these systems whould make car thieves think twice. As usual, keep up the good work, EPD.

How about wrote on Dec 26, 2007 7:17 AM:putting them at the border leading into Mexico?

Ken wrote on Dec 26, 2007 9:31 AM:Great work for the Escondido Police! I think that all of the cities should have at least one. The cost could help in lowering the insurance costs, as well as putting criminals behind bars. The thought of putting them on the border sounds like a very good ideal. Where the ACLU needs to start working for the American people and not the criminals! Privacy-----get real!

I wish they could scan the wrote on Dec 26, 2007 10:32 AM:number on our decals. I have had my license decals stolen TWICE in the last few years. I cut them now so they can't peel them off and steal them so their cars look like they are currently registered.

Definetly puet them at the border! wrote on Dec 26, 2007 10:47 AM:How about placing them a mile or two from the border so by the time the vehicle tries to cross ,the police (who need to be stationed there) will know the vehicle was stolen. My car ended up in Mexico being driven by an official after I went to the movies in Mira Mesa. Thankfully I had Lo Jack because while I had insurance, my car would have been extremely depreciated and I would not of been able to buy a similiar one.

ACLU wrote on Dec 26, 2007 12:09 PM:ACLU can go take a flying leap! They are to be called the AMERICAN civil liberties union. Not those for who are taking the cars across the border or for those who are committing crimes against the Americans! I'm all for the technology regardless of it intruding on my privacy. I'd rather be safe and secure and give up some privacy. I don't have anything to hide anyway, so why should I care?

Mvet wrote on Dec 26, 2007 12:10 PM:Too bad they cannot make one of these contraptions that would let you know if the driver had a license or not.

goldfish226 wrote on Dec 26, 2007 4:19 PM:So if an alarm goes off indicating a stolen car, how does the cop find it again? Does the software then direct him back to the car? They must drive around hundreds if not thousands of cars at any one time.

aclu member... wrote on Dec 26, 2007 6:35 PM:the same technology can be misused quite easily. One only has to look at the checkered history of American law enforcement to see how this can happen. Wire-tapping technology was soon abused by the FBI and other police forces to spy on civil rights leaders and other perons thought to be "undesirables". Tracking license plates could become another tool of political and social repression. Funny how the right wing commenters who usually distrust the government haven't chimed in with the aclu on this one.

To aclu member wrote on Dec 26, 2007 9:16 PM:We may not trust everything in our government, but we trust the aclu even less. Even to the point of contempt. Go save an Illegal Alien because we don't want you.

Next to the ACLU wrote on Dec 26, 2007 9:19 PM:the SPLC is the biggest anti American hate group in the country. They are the leaders in the blame America mentality that is destroying this once great nation. AND they use YOUR tax dollars to do it. WAKE UP AMERICA.
Gail Chatfield, the NCT's latest anti American mouthpiece is a supposed legal immigrant from Australia. Well Gail, the commies regained power there, you can safely go home and fight for the destruction of YOUR homeland and leave mine alone.

Skip wrote on Dec 27, 2007 9:16 AM:Are people so stupid that they would drive a stolen car, complete with license plates around town? You would not think, but I guess a lot of these theives could not even graduate from Public Schools.

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