“Florida’s driver-and-vehicle database, the system that can help law enforcement identify victims of fatal crashes and decipher the identity of a suspect, can be a useful tool for cops. But at least 74 law enforcers were suspected of misusing D.A.V.I.D. in 2012, a nearly 400 percent increase from 2011, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. Officers who needlessly pull information or photographs from D.A.V.I.D. that would otherwise be private could face criminal charges, sanctions or disciplinary action. And yet the temptation of looking up a relative, a celebrity’s address or a romantic interest is too great for some law enforcers.”
Related posts:
Bitcoin Boom Spreads to IPhones With Mobile-Payment Apps
Emerging market rout threatens wider global economy
Cheers erupt as Egyptian president removed and constitution suspended by military
Officer charged with robbing, extorting targets of police investigations
Credit Suisse says it will liquidate the volatility security that lost 85% in a day
Bitcoin Companies and Entrepreneurs Can't Get Bank Accounts
The Company Making Billions Off China’s Worried Parents
Icahn warns market is ‘extremely overheated’
Home Depot Co-Founder: We Should Throw Edward Snowden a Party - We Ought to Be Grateful
Turkish gold exports rise 800 pct on demand from Iran
Study Indicates That America's Driving Boom is Over
Puerto Rico Defaults On Bonds: Return Does Not Come Without Risk
How the US sent $12bn in cash to Iraq. And watched it vanish [2007]
Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox hit by $75 million lawsuit
Woman with HIV alleges police bias in suit against Dearborn