Prince William police get license plate readers

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By Cheryl Chumley

Published: July 16, 2008

Prince William police credit a new device that reads license plates at lightning speed with the recovery of 10 stolen vehicles, seven stolen plates and arrest of five on theft charges in the last six months.

"We've used it to assist our gangs and narcotics units … to find out who's going where," added detective Roland Mulligan in a Tuesday presentation to the Board of County Supervisors about the police department's latest equipment addition, two automated mobile license plate readers.

Called the ELSAG North America MPH-900 LPR System, the mobile form of the equipment is capable of "captur[ing] 1,500 license plate numbers and images per minute, reading all 50 states, Canada, Mexico and many Arabic characters," according to the manufacturer's Web site.

Prince William has two of these systems, purchased with seizure dollars, and plans call for the purchase of

additional units if grant applications allow. The devices are mounted atop police vehicles—though they could also be affixed to a school bus, for example, or hidden inside of taxi cab signs --and regardless of whether the officer is driving or parked, plates are scanned and the collected numbers and letters are processed by the on-board computer system.

Within seconds, officers are alerted to a stolen vehicle or stolen plate.

Moreover, Mulligan said, the system includes a search function that allows officers to enter tag numbers to help locate a particular vehicle plate that was previously captured. The feature comes in handy for police checking for parking violators—those who stay too long in one spot—or even during bank robberies, he said.

"Say you have a serial bank robber," Mulligan explained, "and you capture all the tags in the area of the first robbery … then capture the tags in the

second robbery area."

Analyze the images for matching plates—and voila, a suspect is quickly uncovered, he said.

"There are some weaknesses to the system," Mulligan said. "Not a lot, but some."

Partial plate reads sometimes give the system operator a false positive, and antique plates can't be read at all, he said. Also, weather conditions can skew readings.

"Darkness is not a problem," Mulligan said. "The only problems I ever saw were freezing rain or heavy snow obscuring the letters."

According to the manufacturer, the system works well at both patrol and highway driving speeds—at "oncoming differential speeds in excess of 120 miles-per-hour and passing speeds in excess of 75 miles-per-hour," the ELSAG Web site reports.

The system is used extensively in the Prince George's County police department in Maryland, and by Vir-ginia's state police, Mulligan said, and to a lesser degree in Fairfax County.

Staff writer Cheryl Chumley can be reached at 703-670-1907.

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( paperboy ) on July 24, 2008 at 7:14 am

People always want to critizise people who question the governement. They say things like “If you dont break the law you have nothing to worry about.” But I am worried if someone else breaks the law. It could be someone hacks this system and steals the data or a corrupt employee who sells the data. I dont have a problem with the idea of this system to find stolen vehicles. But logging the time, date and location of every vehicle it encounters on the road and to store that information indefinetly seems like a dangerous idea and an invasion of our privacy.

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Posted by ( willhawk ) on July 23, 2008 at 1:22 pm

I have been here in the US for awhile now and am very surprised that the Police do not have Multinova radar cameras. The country I come from has them in every state and uses them as a revenue raiser as well as speeding control. One state actually has a no tolerance policy and it is where I was charged $135 for being 3 Km over the limit. We also have a point policy where when you lose 13 points your license is automatically cancelled for 3 months. You talk about police state go to some other countries and find out what a police state is. I think if you dont break the law you have nothing to worry about.

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Posted by ( nitrovic ) on July 21, 2008 at 5:39 pm

Your plate is already in public view and on record with the DMV.  Police are legally allowed to run any plate they want at anytime for any reason.  Hardly a “police state”.  Go put tinfoil on your head and wait for the black helicopters....

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Posted by ( paperboy ) on July 19, 2008 at 9:09 pm

I have a problem with them keeping all this information stored. They probably share it with other agencies. If my car is not stolen and it records my plate and location and keeps that on file and shares it with other agencies. I am sorry but that is tracking the innocent public and it is wrong.

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Posted by ( khader1955 ) on July 18, 2008 at 9:03 pm

Hope to see cameras in police cars also so the officers can do their jobs without afraid from being sued.

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Posted by ( T Dawg ) on July 17, 2008 at 8:40 am

Excellent!!! Congrats on your new law enforcement tool ...

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Posted by ( nitrovic ) on July 17, 2008 at 7:15 am

good use of seized dollars. I hope they buy more.  I can’t stand people who steal cars.

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