Wednesday, April 18, 2018

LPD: Voluntary Security Camera Registration Initiative

Lakewood Police Dept  joins other municipalities across the nation by offering residents and business that have cameras on their property to register with the police department to help solve crimes known as SCRAM. You will only be contacted if a crime occurs in your neighborhood and you are willing to share any footage your cameras may have recorded and/or photographed. In 2014 a bill was introduced in NJ that Permits municipalities to enact ordinance requiring registration of private outdoor video surveillance cameras.

from the LPD website:
"In an effort to continue our commitment to providing excellent police services, the Lakewood Police Department is forming a community partnership that all residents and business that have cameras on their property can register with the police department. Participation in this partnership is completely voluntary. All registered information will be kept confidential and will only be viewed by authorized Lakewood Police Department personnel. We are not asking and will not monitor your cameras. This is strictly to be used as an investigative tool to aide officers and detectives." 

Obviously, people are hesitant giving over access of their private home video to the govt, Read this article on copblock explaining the other side.

A growing number of police departments across the US want access to your video.
Surveillance Camera Registration And Mapping, or SCRAM as it’s called, is a program where police have residents ‘voluntarily’ register their home surveillance systems with the local police. The way the program is supposed to work, is when a crime is committed near your home, police can ‘request’ all the footage that your system recorded. Of course, if you don’t voluntarily give up the footage, police will either take it by force, or get a warrant to secure the footage.

I know what you’re thinking: Why on Earth would you tell the police you have a CCTV security system? It’s a very logical argument. I, for one, wouldn’t want the police to have access to any audio/video that I have. But in some areas of the country, residents are required by law to register those devices with the local police departments.



Take New Jersey, for example.  Assemblyman Ralph Caputo crafted bill A-3843 permitting a municipality to enact an ordinance establishing a private outdoor video surveillance camera registry, requiring owners of such cameras to register them with police.  People who don’t do it would be subject to $100 fines. That bill is currently making it’s way through the state legislature (it currently has been amended to make the registration process voluntary, though if the registration will be voluntary, why is there a need to pass this bill?)

Registration data must include the owner’s name, address, telephone number, listing of all cameras used there, description of areas viewed by the cameras, and details about how and how long images are saved. New Jersey isn’t alone in their registry.  The cities of Fremont, San Mateo and Sacramento in California all have ‘voluntary’ registries as well. Additionally, St. Petersburg, Florida began their ‘voluntary’ registration last year.

The Deep, Dark Web

Without going into detail, the majority of IP based cameras are freely searchable on the Internet. If you voluntarily register your devices with police, chances are, they can view the live video stream online – without the owner’s knowledge or permission. This is something that hackers (and by now the general public) have known about for years. Regardless, you can bet the various police departments, who are encouraging your voluntary registration, know about this as well. After you register your camera with the police, it only takes a few simple clicks to view a live stream of your video surveillance system, and you’ll be none-the-wiser.

So, if your local police department asks you to ‘voluntarily’ register your security system with them, say no. Whether or not they are smart enough to illegally gain entry into your system, they can still get a warrant and force you to turn over all audio/video from your cameras. see more here

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