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Tracking Public Movement: Exploring the Legal and Privacy Implications of Surveillance Involving Automatic License Plate Readers


Level: Intermediate
Runtime: 94 minutes
Recorded Date: January 26, 2021
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Agenda

  • What Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPRs) are
  • The types of data collected by ALPRs and who uses them
  • Fourth Amendment case law involving privacy in public
  • Recent cases involving evidence collected by ALPRs
  • Future of ALPRs and likely contours of permissible use
  • Data privacy implications
Runtime: 1 hour, 34 minutes
Recorded: January 26, 2021
For NY - Difficulty Level: Both newly admitted and experienced attorneys

Description

Speakers will discuss recent cases involving challenges to evidence gathered by ALPRs and how courts assess the admissibility of evidence collected by ALPRs. The program will also explore the ways data collected by ALPRs can be used in different practice areas.

This program was recorded on January 26th, 2021.

Provided By

American Bar Association
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Panelists

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Peter Moomjian, Esq.

Of Counsel
Lester Schwab Katz & Dwyer, LLP

Peter Moomjian joined the firm as an associate in 2017. His practice focuses on the defense of general liability matters in the state courts of New York. Prior to joining the firm, Mr. Moomjian was an Associate at a large-sized firm located in Midtown Manhattan defending premises liability cases. He is admitted to and practices in the State Courts of New York and New Jersey.

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Gail Gottehrer

Vice President, Global Litigation, Labor & Employment, and Government Relations
Fresh Del Monte

"Gail is a Vice President in the Legal Department at Del Monte Fresh Produce, where she is responsible for Global Litigation, Labor & Employment, and Government Relations. She is an expert on the cybersecurity, privacy, and legal issues associated the data collected and used by emerging technologies including AI, biometric devices and sensors, autonomous vehicles, the Internet of Things, blockchain, and the metaverse. She is also one of the few defense lawyers to have been involved in the trial of a class action to verdict before a jury.
Gail has taught Law for Knowledge Innovation at Columbia University and is a Fellow at the Center for Legal Innovation at Vermont Law School. She has taught technology law courses for judges at the National Judicial College and the New York State Judicial Institute, and has guest lectured on vehicle data regulation at Stanford University, the Wharton School, and Interpol.
Gail founded and leads the Cybersecurity Subcommittee of the New York State Bar Association’s Committee on Technology and the Legal Profession and is a former Chairperson of that Committee. She also serves at Co-Chair of the National Association of Women Lawyers’ Intellectual Property & Technology Affinity Group.
An internationally recognized thought leader, Gail served as a peer reviewer for Interpol’s Framework for Responding to a Drone Incident and was a speaker at Interpol’s 2019 Car Cyber Threats Expert Group Meeting. A member of the Atomium – European Institute for Science, Media and Democracy’s AI4People Automotive Committee, she co-authored a paper, AI4People: Ethical Guidelines for the Automotive Sector – Fundamental Requirements and Practical Recommendations, that was published in the International Journal of Technoethics (Volume 12, Issue 1, January-June 2021). She is also a member of the ITU’s Focus Group on AI for Autonomous and Assisted Driving and a contributor to its recently published report, Automated Driving Safety Data Protocol – Ethical and Legal Considerations of Continual Monitoring.
Gail was selected as one the Profiles in Diversity Journal’s 2017 Women Worth Watching in STEM and one of the Connecticut Technology Council’s 2016 Women of Innovation. She is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Law School and served as a law clerk in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas.

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Hon. Ronald J. Hedges

Senior Counsel
Dentons

Ronald is a member of Dentons' Litigation and Dispute Resolution practice group. He has extensive experience in e-discovery and in the management of complex litigation and has served as a special master, arbitrator and mediator. He also consults on management and discovery of electronically stored information (“ESI”).

Ron Hedges was a United States Magistrate Judge in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey from 1986 to 2007. While a magistrate judge, he was the Compliance Judge for the Court Mediation Program, a member of the Lawyers Advisory Committee, and both a member of, and reporter for, the Civil Justice Reform Act Advisory Committee. From 2001 to 2005 he was a member of the Advisory Group of Magistrate Judges.

Ron was an adjunct professor at Seton Hall University School, where he taught mediation skills. He was an adjunct professor at Georgetown University Law Center and remains an adjunct professor at Rutgers School of Law—Newark. He taught courses on electronic discovery and evidence at both these schools. Ron was a Fellow at the Center for Information Technology of Princeton University for 2010-11 and 2011-12. He is also a member of the College of the State Bar of Texas.


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