Illinois License Plate Cameras Are Violating People's Constitutional Rights, Says New Suit
The plaintiffs are challenging the state's widespread surveillance, which it collects through over 600 cameras.

Can state police track drivers everywhere they go via hundreds of license plate cameras? A new lawsuit says that Illinois' widespread use of such cameras—called automatic license plate readers (ALPRs)—violates the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches because it breaches citizens' reasonable expectations of privacy.
The complaint—filed by two residents of Cook County, Stephanie Scholl and Frank Bednarz, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois on May 30—names the Illinois State Police (ISP), ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, and Gov. J.B. Pritzker as the defendants.
"Defendants are tracking anyone who drives to work in Cook County—or to school, or a grocery store, or a doctor's office, or a pharmacy, or a political rally, or a romantic encounter, or family gathering—every day," the lawsuit states, "without any reason to suspect anyone of anything, and are holding onto those whereabouts just in case they decide in the future that some citizen might be an appropriate target of law enforcement."
Illinois' highway camera network began in 2019 with the passage of the Tamara Clayton Expressway Camera Act, named for a postal worker who was shot and killed on an interstate highway south of Chicago. The act directed the state police to "increase the amount of cameras along expressways and the State highway system."
Illinois State Police received a $12.5 million state grant in 2021 to install cameras, which was more than doubled in June 2022 when Pritzker extended the act, granting up to $20 million in additional funding. As of publishing time, the Illinois Department of Transportation has purchased 652 license plate cameras, of which 340 are installed in Cook County, which includes Chicago.
According to the ISP's dashboard, in the past month, the system has recorded over 215 million "detections" (when a camera captures a digital image of a license plate) and over 1. 4 million "hits" (when a captured license plate matches a plate on the state police's "Hot List," which includes the license plate numbers of stolen vehicles and wanted subjects). Annually, the system records over 1.5 billion detections—more than 100 times the state's population.
Readings from the cameras are stored by ISP for 90 days.
But where law enforcement sees a more effective way to catch criminals, some legal experts see a potential violation of privacy—and, by proxy, of citizens' Fourth Amendment rights.
Since the Supreme Court's 1967 decision in Katz v. United States, searches that infringe upon "reasonable expectations of privacy" have been held to violate the Fourth Amendment, with some limited exceptions. This recent lawsuit argues that citizens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the "aggregation" of their location data—that is, in the summation of their movements.
"I think it's fair to say this is a new area of law where there are very few cases and rules are still being written," Reilly Stephens, counsel for the Liberty Justice Center, which is representing the plaintiffs, tells Reason. "We want to be a part of shaping what those legal rules are going to be."
The most analogous case is Commonwealth v. McCarthy (2020), which was the first appellate court case to address the interplay between license plate cameras and the Fourth Amendment.
In McCarthy, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court denied defendant Jason McCarthy's motion to suppress ALPR evidence but held that McCarthy's challenge was potentially viable, providing that the license plate tracking was sufficiently comprehensive. "With enough cameras in enough locations," the court decided, "the historic location data from an ALPR system in Massachusetts would invade a reasonable expectation of privacy and would constitute a search for constitutional purposes."
McCarthy was only tracked by two license plate cameras—on the two bridges that serve as the entryway to Cape Cod—which would have given police only a limited picture of his whereabouts. In Illinois, there are over 600 such cameras, located all across the state.
For that reason, the Liberty Justice Center believes the Illinois complaint could fare better than McCarthy's. "We intend to give the Court in our case what the Massachusetts Supreme Court wanted but didn't have: evidence that the given system of ALPRs is so pervasive as to generate a sufficiently comprehensive record of citizen's movements," Stephens tells Reason.
As tracking measures become increasingly common and cost-effective, courts will need a bright line to distinguish allowable public surveillance from that which infringes upon citizens' privacy expectations. If there were license plate readers on every street, that would very likely violate legitimate expectations of privacy. In Massachusetts, that state's highest court said the system of two ALPRs did not. What distinguishes the two? Where should courts draw the line?
"The case is an important one because it could help to clarify and strengthen the scope of Fourth Amendment rights against increasingly ubiquitous and unavoidable government surveillance," Jonathan Manes, senior counsel at the MacArthur Justice Center, tells Reason about the Illinois lawsuit. "This case seeks to ensure that advances in police technology do not leave the Fourth Amendment in the dust."
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A talking suit? Women’s Warehouse?
Illinois.... Extreme far left wing nazi communist Racist state.
'Nuff said.
Sounds like they have a lot on their plate.
Expecting privacy from the state has not been reasonable for decades.
Try to follow along. No one is saying it is "expected", or not. Some people are saying it is unconstitutional, and they are trying to fight against it.
This is nothing less than fallout from the privacy issues infesting the Patriot Act. The NSA collects god-only-knows how much information from god-only-knows what kinds of electronic communications from/to god-only-knows how many people for god-only-knows exactly what purposes, retains such information for god-only-knows how long, and shares such information with god-only-knows what other agencies. The 90-days license plate capture retention policy should be subject to challenges based on the right to be forgotten.
Yes, and that's why there is no more crime.
Yeah, apparently it's fine for the FedGov to snoop on every communication you make and every move your cell phone makes but having a local city or county record movements via traffic camera is a bridge too far.
Never mind that the FedGov can just get your cell phone movements. They don't need any cameras, they have towers that track everyone's cell movements. (Ok, the towers don't belong to them they just siphon off all the data through their closed door data rooms in every major hub.)
If they really want to go down that rabbit hole the camera's themselves are frankly irrelevant. Your rights have already been violated, and to a much greater extent than this.
At the moment the limiting factor is that massive corporations don't have to answer to local politicians, they answer to the leviathan. If they answered to local politicians, they'd use that data to issue tickets automatically via detected ground speed and geolocation data of said device.
it’s worse than that. There’s no credible evidence for any ghodz, so it doesn’t know, either.
Are these the same license plate scanners that Reason said were an important technology and totes libertarian, "if done right"?
*checks*
Oh why yes they are.
If there were license plate readers on every street, that would very likely violate legitimate expectations of privacy.
Unless it's a geofenced "congestion pricing" scheme that... *facepalm* introduced markets into traffic patterns in urban areas.
Make it illegal for any person/entity to do such a thing as record all license plates that pass.
Otherwise I'm not sympathetic. The government will just outsource the privacy violations if the courts rule the police can't do it themselves. 3rd party doctrine or adjacent.
This country is a joke, and not for the reasons that filthy leftists or ruso cockroaches believe.
And yet, only in this country is there a viable legal challenge to it.
Serious question, no snark. What reasonable expectation of privacy does one have on a public roadway?
I believe it depends on the reason for the data collection. If we're collecting it to charge you a fee for driving on the road, go forth and prosper. If you're catching criminals, no way.
M'kay. Thanks for the serious response. Sounds weird, but probably legit.
You know, good sir, based on your response, I'm tempted to think that you don't think this is a serious libertarian proposal.
Does the right of privacy depend on what someone is doing that they’d like to keep private? Why would a desire to not have the state track my whereabouts in order to tax me be different from my not wanting the state to track me while I’m committing a crime?
And not a lawyer, but I thought the expectation of privacy depended on whether what I was doing could be seen by the public? My license plate is visible to everyone, and tracking my whereabouts with a camera isn’t different than if an agent of the state simply followed me around.
If an agent of the state continually follows you around without some sort of probable cause, their agency is opening themselves up to a lawsuit for harassment.
And, opposing this is a good idea for a similar reason to never consenting to a search of your vehicle at a traffic stop, even if you don't have any contraband: You might be dealing with a crooked cop willing to plant evidence. If you consent to a search and the cop plants a bag of cocaine in your car that he then "finds", you're fucked. If he searches your vehicle without your consent and plants evidence, you might still get it tossed out in court.
In this case, if a crooked cop wants to frame you for something, they might be able to insert license plate information into the data files to make it look like your car was at the scene of a crime.
That is the million dollar question. The "right to privacy" has taken a bit of a beating over the last several years, and it may be that the right to wander around in public without being electronically followed (absent probable cause) will not survive the right to privacy re-think going on at SCOTUS level.
The 4th Amendment is not very explicit about any searches which takes place on public property, so any "rights" Americans enjoy in that realm have been essentially created by rulings of the Supreme Court. Unfortunately, that makes them vulnerable to subsequent rulings of the Supreme Court.
It seems like they’re going to attempt to litigate the doctrine of ‘mosaic theory’ of the 4th amendment. It not a singular instance of data collection, but an aggregate of large data sets of movements combined with personally identifiable data. When a large set of license plate reader data comes up on a spreadsheet with time stamps, gps coordinates, make/model/color recognition etc; its not an image of a roadway, its a detailed mosaic/picture of a person’s habits and patterns of life.
None... according to democrats and some reublicans.
Are you continuing to vote for democrats?
Ask me again why I left the Land of Lenin decades ago.
Huh, Gavin Newsom just declared there's a problem at the southern border and fentanyl is flowing through it, unchecked. This is some serious through-the-looking-glass shit here.
"Show me the
manlicense plate, and I'll find you the crime.. of fine.. or something.."- Comrade Commissar Pritzker
Outlaw license plates.
These things are evil. A 90 day retention period seems like nothing compared to other areas of the country. New Jersey has a 3 year mandatory data retention policy. New York has a MINIMUM data retention policy of 1 year which was lowered in 2022 from a 20 year data retention policy minimum. NYC data retention policy is currently 5 years.
The philosophical and psychological underpinnings of this oppressive technology: ‘A state of permanent registration’:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=RbllEmx0WPU
What have we become,
Save our ship
Excellent work Patrick.
1984 was meant to be a warning, not an instruction manual.
This takes it too far. Police in the past have searched for "blue Chevy pickups with an R in the license plate" to find the perpetrator of a specific crime. The point is the Crime was known before the search commenced.
In this case, they are collecting large amounts of personal data in the hopes of finding a crime.
I submit that the very randomness and lack of focus is what makes this search and data collection unreasonable, per the 4th.