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#license plate news
dailylicenseplates · 10 days
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In 2023, Assemblymember Timothy Grayson proposed a bill that would being back the California 1950’s and 1970’s license plates as legacy plates. In 2015, these plates were proposed along with the 1960’s plate for rerelease, only the 1960’s passed, becoming the fastest special license plate in California to reach 7,500 pre orders necessary to guarantee its release, and remains the most popular special plate today. The new bill to reintroduce the 50’s and 70’s plates failed to pass once again and these plates will not be made available.
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gooperts-gunk · 19 days
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no shot bad just said I CAN FIX HIM about cucurucho. skull emoji HE ALREADY LEFT UR HOUSE GIRL LET HIM GOOOO HE'S TOXICCC sob emoji
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licenseplateshowdown · 5 months
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Mountain Region Quarterfinals
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Arizona vs New Mexico
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yiyongs · 27 days
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guys i love my new car so much!!!! also the older couple that sold her to me texted me last night to tell me her name is dory because of that scene where she reads escape as escapé (she’s a ford escape) and i was literally tearing up at how cute they are
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daisyducklover2021 · 5 months
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Cuckoo Loco tried to cheer Daisy up about her Unlucky playoffs
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Daisy Duck: (Sobs) Why did I always end in an Accident, WHHYYY?
Cuckoo Loca: Maybe your Roadster has steering troubles?
Daisy Duck: No its not that, my new arch rival Natalie Quackange mostly fishtail me which kept getting me out of the race, and your racing rival Cuckoo Sanchez made hit the pits on Purpose.
Cuckoo Loca: Daisy, don't push hard on yourself.
Daisy Duck: Is it bad enough that Natalie push me a lot and she almost won once.
Cuckoo Loca: Yeah, she must be cheating, Face It Daisy enemies thinks they are better than us, but they are wrong.
Daisy Duck: What do you mean Cuckoo Loca? (sniffs)
Cuckoo Loca: Well life isn't perfect, I know your tough, skillful, and caring which that makes you a better roadster racer.
Daisy Duck: (sniffles) Your probably right Cuckoo Loca I mean Its not that I don't win all the time, I often help to protect my friends.
Cuckoo Loca: Yeah remember over the summer you protected Mickey to aviod letting Pete win
Daisy Duck: Oh yes I helped Mickey to make him win without letting Pete pushing him I blocked Petey real good.
Cuckoo Loca: (laughs) that's a good one Daisy, Now we got to get back to the Party Palace to set up the place for Minnie's Champion Cup before tonight.
Daisy Duck: Right I should support my best friend's racing champion although I'm already eliminated.
Cuckoo Loca: Atta Girl Daisy.
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gwydionmisha · 2 months
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Reminder: "America first" is a NAZI slogan broadly adopted by Trump and the Republicans for obvious reasons.
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States across the country have banned or restricted access to abortion following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade last year. A new Illinois law will ensure police cannot use data from license plate readers to track people traveling into the state for reproductive healthcare.
Sponsors told reporters in June that some Republican-led states have used automatic license plate readers as a tool to hunt down people seeking abortion and other reproductive healthcare.
"We created an island on which every human being is recognized and given the dignity of controlling their own body and their own destiny," said Rep. Ann Williams (D-Chicago). "That includes people who are traveling into the state of Illinois to seek legal healthcare services."
The legislation prohibits sharing of data or allowing law enforcement to use the information to criminalize anyone coming into or out of Illinois for healthcare.
"We are not initiating laws simply for ideological purposes," said Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias. "The health and safety of individuals seeking critical reproductive healthcare is real and it's directly at stake."
House Bill 3326 also bans the use of data from license plate readers to detain people based on their immigration status.
The Secretary of State's office said police will still be allowed to use these cameras to look for suspects in violent crimes, carjackings, and auto theft. However, law enforcement will be required to sign an agreement noting that they will only use license plate readers for those reasons.
"We will continue to protect women and people not only with essential abortion care and reproductive care, but also gender affirming care," said Sen. Sara Feigenholtz (D-Chicago).
Giannoulias said no one deserves government intervention when they abide by laws and freedoms guaranteed in Illinois. The Democrat stressed that the automatic license plate readers need to be regulated to ensure people aren't criminalized for lawful behavior.
House Bill 3326 passed out of the House on a partisan 72-39 vote on May 10. The legislation later passed out of the Senate on a partisan 39-15 vote on May 19.
The new law takes effect on January 1, 2024.
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free-my-mindd · 2 years
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dokani · 9 months
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sometimes i struggle watching house solely for the fact it is so obvious they are not in new jersey
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doctorslippery · 1 year
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dailylicenseplates · 17 days
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Arizona is hosting a vote for the Arizona National Guard license plate. There are 72 options to choose from and the winner will be made into a real plate
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licenseplateshowdown · 5 months
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Maritime Region Quarterfinals
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Maine vs New Brunswick
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saintflint · 6 months
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little blessings.
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daisyducklover2021 · 6 months
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HAPPY HALLOWEEN!
Daisy Doozy: "Magic Moo Wand, make this orange, make this old School Bus Into a Ghoul Bus".
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Seventy-one California police agencies in 22 counties must immediately stop sharing automated license plate reader (ALPR) data with law enforcement agencies in other states because it violates California law and could enable prosecution of abortion seekers and providers elsewhere, three civil liberties groups demanded Thursday in letters to those agencies.
The letters from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California (ACLU NorCal), and the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California (ACLU SoCal) gave the agencies a deadline of June 15 to comply and respond. A months-long EFF investigation involving hundreds of public records requests uncovered that many California police departments share records containing detailed driving profiles of local residents with out-of-state agencies.
ALPR camera systems collect and store location information about drivers, including dates, times, and locations. This sensitive information can reveal where individuals work, live, associate, worship—or seek reproductive health services and other medical care.
“ALPRs invade people’s privacy and violate the rights of entire communities, as they often are deployed in poor and historically overpoliced areas regardless of crime rates,” said EFF Staff Attorney Jennifer Pinsof. “Sharing ALPR data with law enforcement in states that criminalize abortion undermines California’s extensive efforts to protect reproductive health privacy.”
The letters note how the nation’s legal landscape has changed in the past year.
“Particularly since the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade, ALPR technology and the information it collects is vulnerable to exploitation against people seeking, providing, and facilitating access to abortion,” the letters say. “Law enforcement officers in anti-abortion jurisdictions who receive the locations of drivers collected by California-based ALPRs may seek to use that information to monitor abortion clinics and the vehicles seen around them and closely track the movements of abortion seekers and providers. This threatens even those obtaining or providing abortions in California, since several anti-abortion states plan to criminalize and prosecute those who seek or assist in out-of-state abortions.”
Idaho, for example, has enacted a law that makes helping a pregnant minor get an abortion in another state punishable by two to five years in prison.
The agencies that received the demand letters have shared ALPR data with law enforcement agencies across the country, including agencies in states with abortion restrictions including Alabama, Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. Since 2016, sharing any ALPR data with out-of-state or federal law enforcement agencies is a violation of the California Civil Code (SB 34). Nevertheless, many agencies continue to use services such as Vigilant Solutions or Flock Safety to make the ALPR data they capture available to out-of-state and federal agencies.
California law enforcement’s sharing of ALPR data with law enforcement in states that criminalize abortion also undermines California’s extensive efforts to protect reproductive health privacy, specifically a 2022 law (AB 1242) prohibiting state and local agencies from providing abortion-related information to out-of-state agencies.
For one of the new letters from EFF, ACLU NorCal, and ACLU SoCal: https://eff.org/document/sample-alpr-demand-letter-tracy-police-department
For information on how ALPRs threaten abortion access: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/09/automated-license-plate-readers-threaten-abortion-access-heres-how-policymakers
For general information about ALPRs: https://www.eff.org/pages/automated-license-plate-readers-alpr
Agencies that received the demand letters include:
• Alhambra Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Antioch Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• Arcadia Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Beaumont Police Department (Riverside County)
• Brawley Police Department (Imperial County)
• Brentwood Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• Buena Park Police Department (Orange County)
• Burbank Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Chino Police Department (San Bernardino County)
• Clovis Police Department (Fresno County)
• Cypress Police Department (Orange County)
• Desert Hot Springs Police Department (Riverside County)
• Downey Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• El Centro Police Department (Imperial County)
• El Dorado County Sheriff's Office (El Dorado County)
• Escondido Police Department (San Diego County)
• Folsom Police Department (Sacramento County)
• Fontana Police Department (San Bernardino County)
• Fountain Valley Police Department (Orange County)
• Garden Grove Police Department (Orange County)
• Gilroy Police Department (Santa Clara County)
• Hemet Police Department (Riverside County)
• Hercules Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• Hermosa Beach Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Humboldt County Sheriff's Office (Humboldt County)
• Imperial County Sheriff's Office (Imperial County)
• Imperial Police Department (Imperial County)
• Kern County Sheriff's Office (Kern County)
• Kings County Sheriff's Office (Kings County)
• La Habra Police Department (Orange County)
• La Palma Police Department (Orange County)
• Laguna Beach Police Department (Orange County)
• Lincoln Police Department (Placer County)
• Lodi Police Department (San Joaquin County)
• Madera Police Department (Madera County)
• Manteca Police Department (San Joaquin County)
• Menifee Police Department (Riverside County)
• Merced Police Department (Merced County)
• Montebello Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Monterey Park Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Murrieta Police Department (Riverside County)
• Novato Police Department (Marin County)
• Oakley Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• Ontario Police Department (San Bernardino County)
• Orange County Sheriff's Department (Orange County)
• Orange Police Department (Orange County)
• Oxnard Police Department (Ventura County)
• Palm Springs Police Department (Riverside County)
• Palos Verdes Estates Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Pasadena Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Pittsburg Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• Rio Vista Police Department (Solano County)
• Ripon Police Department (San Joaquin County)
• Riverside County Sheriff's Department (Riverside County)
• San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department (San Bernardino County)
• San Bernardino Police Department (San Bernardino County)
• San Joaquin County Sheriff's Office (San Joaquin County)
• San Pablo Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• San Rafael Police Department (Marin County)
• San Ramon Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• Seal Beach Police Department (Orange County)
• Simi Valley Police Department (Ventura County)
• Stockton Police Department (San Joaquin County)
• Torrance Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Tracy Police Department (San Joaquin County)
• Tustin Police Department (Orange County)
• Walnut Creek Police Department (Contra Costa County)
• West Covina Police Department (Los Angeles County)
• Westminster Police Department (Orange County)
• Westmorland Police Department (Imperial County)
• Woodland Police Department (Yolo County)
That’s 71 agencies in 22 counties:
• 12 in Orange County
• 11 in Los Angeles County
• 8 in Contra Costa County
• 7 in Riverside County
• 6 in San Joaquin County
• 5 in San Bernardino County
• 5 in Imperial County
• 2 in Ventura County
• 2 in Marin County
• 1 each in El Dorado, Fresno, Humboldt, Kern, Kings, Madera, Merced, Placer, Sacramento, San Diego, Santa Clara, Solano, and Yolo counties
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teabree-shark · 1 year
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Listen, I don't always try to sneak a fast one past the DMV, but when I do it's with as much effort as I can muster.
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