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California Officials Admit To Using License Plate Readers To Monitor Welfare Recipients (gizmodo.com)

According to a report from the Sacramento Bee, officials in Sacramento County have been accessing license plate reader data to track welfare recipients suspected of fraud. The practice dates back to 2016. Gizmodo reports: Sacramento County Department of Human Assistance Director Ann Edwards confirmed to the paper that welfare fraud investigators working under the DHA have used the data for two years on a "case-by-case" basis. Edwards said the DHA pays about $5,000 annually for access to the database. Abbreviated LPR, license plate readers are essentially cameras that upload photographs to a searchable database of images of license plates. If a driver passed by an LPR four times throughout a city, an officer with access would know where and at what time of day. Anyone with access to that data could use it track where someone drove and when, provided they were scanned by the LPR.

It's not immediately clear how travel patterns might reveal welfare fraud. As noted by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, welfare fraud is statistically speaking, extremely rare. In 2012, the DHA found only 500 cases of fraud among Sacramento's 193,000 recipients. Following an inquiry from the EFF, the DHA has instituted a privacy policy (one that didn't exist before their initial inquiry) requiring investigators to justify each request for LPR data. The Sacramento Bee reports the DHA accessed the data over a thousand times in two years.

9 of 170 comments (clear)

  1. welfare fraud rates by Jodka · · Score: 5, Insightful

    from the ./ summary:

    "welfare fraud is statistically speaking, extremely rare. In 2012, the DHA found only 500 cases of fraud among Sacramento's 193,000 recipients."

    To be precise, detecting welfare fraud is extremely rare.

     

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    1. Re:welfare fraud rates by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      from the ./ summary:

      "welfare fraud is statistically speaking, extremely rare. In 2012, the DHA found only 500 cases of fraud among Sacramento's 193,000 recipients."

      To be precise, detecting welfare fraud is extremely rare.

      'detecting and proving'

    2. Re:welfare fraud rates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To be more precise, there are more people looking for welfare cheats than there are policing Wall Street.

      You can follow the money two ways, follow the pennies, or follow the millions/billions.

      But white guys stealing old ladies pensions is just good ol' American Capitalism.

      Good lord, but are our values f'd up or what.

    3. Re:welfare fraud rates by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 5, Informative
      How about the actual article:

      Since June 2016, when the county started using ALPR data, investigators discovered fraud had occurred in about 13,000 of the 35,412 fraud referrals they investigated, or about 37 percent of the time, the DHA said.

      I think BeauHD is putting on his liberal bias glasses when he edited up the summary. DHA says 13,000 confirmed cases of fraud in just 2 years. A far cry from 500...

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    4. Re:welfare fraud rates by SlaveToTheGrind · · Score: 5, Insightful

      does it make financial sense to spend a significant number of man-hours trying to uncover those non-obvious instances of welfare fraud?

      It's more than just dollars spent vs. dollars recovered for the cases you find -- you have to factor in the deterrent effect you get from noisily making examples of the ones you find and thus increasing the known risk of playing the system.

    5. Re:welfare fraud rates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      The downward curve of credibility as your sentence progressed was delightfully smooth.

  2. Re:JFC... by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Little experiment for those at home: Look up the Kelly Blue Book value for a 5-year-old C-class Mercedes, and a 5-year-old Toyota Camry. If you don't want to look, you'll find out the Toyota costs more.

    You're doing well and driving a paid-off Mercedes. And then shit hits the fan. Selling the Mercedes is a bad idea because resale value on luxury cars is terrible. Drive it into the ground, because it will last quite a few more years without maintenance and you've already paid it off.

    Even though people like this poster will insist you must be committing welfare fraud because you are driving what was once an expensive car.

  3. Re:The wrong problem by Dorianny · · Score: 3

    Welfare is used as an umbrella term for all kinds of government assistance programs.Including things like SNAP benefits, Section 8 or public housing. Medicaid, TANF, SSI, etc. Go on pretending we are dumb and talking about some program that ended 20 years ago

  4. Re:You've never been on welfare of any kind by markdavis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >"It's damn near impossible to game the system for long."

    I don't know much about welfare fraud, but suspect it is pretty high in many ways; although the worst problems with it are designed right into it. But Social Security "disability" fraud is rampant and probably far more worthy of investigation. I know people that have been on it for many years who are perfectly able to work, some who even work under-the-table. Almost anyone who is denied just gets a lawyer and "presto", approved... complete with back payments.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/r...
    http://www.reformssdinow.org/w...