i can scan your faces you re coming in and of the officer building, it s a way of identifying people for theft. bad a square garden as a the, if you are lawyer suing them, you can t come in. it seems like it could be ripe for abuse. it s increasing the news now, and being called to be used in a way to aid law enforcement. what do you make of that? problems are a good idea? first of all, when i came on law enforcement 20 some years ago we still handwrote our reports. so i m technology adverse. that being said, i was always skeptical of an overdependence of technology by police officers. i saw when we first thought about the tag readers, he was scandalous s plate readers in the city, officers became incredibly dependent upon that
occurred. but the police looked at other videos, and they may have gotten a glimpse of the license plate. and they may have tracked that vehicle with plate readers or at toll booths and followed that vehicle, as it made its pathway 2,500 miles all the way to pennsylvania. with respect to dna, i think that was explained fairly well, that this is a matter of not codis because codis is a national database. you have to commit certain crimes to become eligible to have your dna put on codis. it s not clear that he was on codis. he wasn t. you can find close relatives sometimes that way. but with genetic genealogy, it s a different pathway. you re looking at public data databases. you know, people join ancestry or one of those other companies to find out about their backgrounds. and that really people don t