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Footage Shows Cop Stalking Woman After Surveilling Her with a LPR

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A police officer speeds 70 MPH down a two-lane highway running over a bridge in the Florida Keys. He passes a dump truck in a no-passing zone, then immediately does it again, crossing over a double-yellow line to pass another truck. He passes a third vehicle, nearly causing a head-on collision with a white pickup truck that veers away from him in the oncoming traffic. The cop keeps driving, and sees the SUV he’s been in pursuit of. He flicks his sirens and lights on and pulls it over.

The cop, Lamar Roman, wasn’t trying to pull over a suspected criminal. He was tracking and chasing a woman that he met and harassed on the set of the AppleTV+ show Bad Monkey, which he had worked a security detail shift on a few weeks prior to pulling her over. After meeting the woman, catcalling her and harassing her for her full name and Instagram details, the cop illegally looked up her vehicle information on DAVID, a Florida Department of Motor Vehicles database for law enforcement. He then put her license plate details on a surveillance “hotlist,” meaning he would get a notification in real time anytime she drove by an AI-powered license plate surveillance camera.

Roman told investigators that he saw the woman as a “shiny thing” and knew that using surveillance tools to track her was illegal, according to police records. He told investigators that “I knew that when I put [her into DAVID], I’m like ‘fuck’ and that’s why I stopped right after and nothing else.” But that wasn’t the end of it; he investigated the woman then used a powerful license plate tracking database to find her location and chase her down. In doing so, he also “almost cause[d] a head on collision while passing as a white truck traveling northbound had to veer off the roadway to avoid a collision.”

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The shocking and egregious incident highlights the fact that police around the country have abused their access to surveillance tools for their own personal stalking projects, and shows how different law enforcement databases and surveillance tools can be tied together to investigate and follow anyone.

The cop, Lamar Roman, was caught and arrested in March, local news outlets reported. 404 Media has obtained video from Roman’s police cruiser and court records associated with the case that show how Roman met, harassed, investigated, and stalked the woman, who was not suspected of committing any crime, had nothing to do with Roman, and had no idea she was being tracked using a series of police surveillance software, hardware, and government databases.

0:00 / 0:35 1× "he also “almost cause[d] a head on collision while passing as a white truck traveling northbound had to veer off the roadway to avoid a collision," the police report said.

Earlier this month, we reported on the fact that police around the country have been caught abusing Flock automated license plate camera s. Roman used a very similar system called Guardian; Flock has faced lots of scrutiny from journalists, privacy activists, and the general public over the last year, but it is worth noting that Flock is just one player in the booming AI license plate reader surveillance business and other systems face many of the same privacy problems Flock does.

Roman met the woman while working an off-duty security detail for Bad Monkey in early February. According to police affidavits, arrest warrants, and summaries of police interviews with both Roman and the woman, Roman whistled and “catcalled” the woman as she got off a bus for extras on set. Roman shouted “Oh my God, why didn’t nobody tell me we were bringing models to set,” the woman told investigators. The woman said “she was immediately uncomfortable with the situation,” and she did not know whether Roman was a real cop or whether he was playing a cop on the show. The woman “told Deputy Roman she has a boyfriend,” the warrant said. “Roman stated something along the lines of ‘I need your name and number just in case I pull you over someday.’” Roman pressured the woman into giving him her Instagram handle; she told investigators that she tried to be “standoffish,” to deter him. The woman was “pulled away by other extras who she knew and the others acknowledged Deputy Roman would not leave [her] alone.”

The woman “stated during one interaction Deputy Roman stated, ‘I’m going to pull you over.’ [She] stated she responded, "no your not.’ [sic] [She] stated Deputy Roman repeated himself and appeared to be flirting and joking. [She] stated she advised Deputy Roman that her boyfriend would not like that, and he ‘laughed it off.’”

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