U.S. Justice Department spies on millions of cars
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The Justice Department has been secretly gathering and
storing hundreds of millions of records about motorists in an effort to
build a national database that tracks the movement of vehicles across
the country, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.
The newspaper said the main aim of the license plate
tracking program run by the Drug Enforcement Administration was to seize
automobiles, money and other assets to fight drug trafficking,
according to one government document.
But the use of the database had expanded to include
hunting for vehicles linked to other possible crimes, including
kidnapping, killings and rape suspects, the paper said, citing current
and former officials and government documents.
While U.S. officials have said they track vehicles near
the Mexican border to combat drug cartels, it had not been previously
revealed the DEA had been working to expand the database "throughout the
United States," the Journal said, citing an email.
It said many state and local law enforcement agencies were
using the database for a variety of investigations, the paper said.
It added it was unclear if any court oversaw or approved the program.
The Journal quoted Senator Patrick Leahy, the senior
Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, as saying the use of license
plate readers "raises significant privacy concerns."
A spokesman for the Justice Department, which oversees the
DEA, told the paper the program complied with federal law. "It is not
new that the DEA uses the license-plate reader program to arrest
criminals and stop the flow of drugs in areas of high trafficking
intensity," the spokesman was quoted as saying.
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