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Crime commission recommends ALPR limits, including 30-day retention and highway permitting by state police

2128333 · January 17, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The commission recommended legislation to regulate automatic license-plate readers, imposing a 30-day data retention period, limits on permitted uses, vendor approval, public posting requirements and a delayed vendor-approval timeline for state highways.

The Virginia Crime Commission voted to recommend legislation to regulate automatic license-plate readers (ALPRs), endorsing a framework that limits use, sets a 30-day retention period and establishes vendor and permitting controls.

Staff described the bill as a regulatory package that would allow law enforcement to use ALPRs for defined public-safety purposes — active criminal investigations, missing or endangered-person cases, investigations related to human trafficking and to receive alerts for wanted persons, stolen vehicles and life-safety license-plate matches — while restricting noncriminal uses and commercial sale of data. The draft requires agencies to adopt and publicly post ALPR policies, produce annual usage reports and maintain an audit trail showing…

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