FBI seeks US-wide access to license plate cameras

The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced plans to purchase nationwide access to license plate reader networks for near real-time vehicle tracking across the United States and its territories.

The agency issued a request for proposals on May 14 for vendors to supply data from cameras covering at least 75 percent of locations. The system must allow searches by full or partial plate numbers, vehicle descriptions, dates, and geographic criteria while delivering results in near real time. Contracts could last up to five years and total as much as $36 million across six regions including Hawaii, Alaska, and Puerto Rico.

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Illustration depicting FBI Director Kash Patel testifying on location data purchases during a Senate hearing, with symbolic tracking map overlays.
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FBI director confirms purchases of Americans' location data

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FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing that the agency buys commercially available data, including location information that can track Americans. The admission came in response to questions from Sen. Ron Wyden, who criticized it as an end-run around the Fourth Amendment. Sen. Tom Cotton defended the practice, likening it to searching public trash.

Mombasa Governor Abdulswamad Nassir has announced the launch of smart CCTV cameras to enforce parking and other county laws. The system, funded entirely by county resources, will identify offenders in real time and track repeat violations.

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The national government has opened an administrative investigation against 37 traffic agencies for possible failures in speed camera systems. Authorities found breaches of technical requirements set by law.

Interior Principal Secretary Raymond Omollo announced the government's plan to roll out body cameras for police officers soon to enhance accountability in the National Police Service (NPS). The statement came during a press address on March 25, 2026, as part of wider police reforms.

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The House and Senate approved a short-term extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act early Friday, moving the program’s expiration from April 20 to April 30 after longer renewal plans stalled amid divisions among House Republicans. President Donald Trump signed the extension on Saturday, setting up another high-stakes fight ahead of the new deadline.

The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has reaffirmed that data collected will be protected by existing laws, while dispelling fears over data privacy following the bodycam rollout to customs officers nationwide on Tuesday. The response on Wednesday, March 11, came after several netizens, especially on X, raised concerns fearing that the footage captured by the bodycams would not be used for the intended purpose. KRA stressed that the recordings will be processed in accordance with the law governing data handling in Kenya.

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The National Transport and Safety Authority has stated that motorists cannot reserve future ordinary registration numbers before a new series is activated. Applicants may instead wait until just before a series such as KEG or KES begins and then apply for a special plate. The clarification followed a viral social media query about combinations including KES 100M.

 

 

 

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