Town Plans To Photograph Car And License Plate of Visitors
July 19, 2009 by national
Filed under Incident Reports

Visitors should be prepared to have their pictures taken as they enter and leave this picturesque town of million-dollar views and homes along the San Francisco Bay.
Officials want to photograph every car and use the license plate information to solve crimes in the town of 9,000. Critics see the plan as an intrusion into the rights of visitors, but proponents say it is a sensible precaution that absolutely will not cross privacy lines.
“As long as you don’t arrive in a stolen vehicle or go on a crime spree while you’re here, your anonymity will be preserved,” said Town Manager Peggy Curran. “We don’t care who you are and we don’t know who you are.”
Cameras are already watching Americans as they drive, bank and shop, and police around the country routinely use cameras to enforce speeding and traffic violations and spot stolen cars.
But Tiburon’s plan may be a little different if only because its geography – laid out on a narrow peninsula with only two roads in and out – makes it possible to keep a close eye on everyone who comes to town.

Before anyone states that their privacy will be violated, please review the US Supreme Court ruling: “Americans should have no expectation of privacy in a public setting.”
If you are not doing anything illegal in Tiburon why should you care?
Then just dont go there, let their economy starve. We are moving more everyday towards a communist state.
We have become a country of fearful children willing to give up our rights for a perception of security. Allowing this to happen makes one as guilty as those who seek to impose it.