There's a camera near your house that already knows every place you drove this week. It logged your plate, your direction, your time — no crime required, no reason needed. And any cop, in any department, can search that database. No warrant. No permission. Most of the time, nobody's looking. But some of the time, the person searching isn't chasing a criminal. They're chasing an ex. A wife. Someone who said no. This is the story of what happens when a surveillance system built to catch criminals gets handed to the people it should be watching too — and how a state that just passed a "privacy" law may have made it harder for you to ever find out.
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