Footage Shows Cop Stalking Woman After Surveilling Her with a LPR

Commenters are furious after a cop allegedly turned road cameras into a personal stalking app

TLDR: A Florida cop allegedly used police-only car tracking tools to find a woman he had harassed, then dangerously chased her down and pulled her over. Commenters say the real scandal is bigger than one officer: it shows how easy it is to abuse surveillance systems with barely any safeguards.

This story had readers doing a full double take: a Florida cop allegedly used government databases and road cameras to track down a woman he had previously harassed, then tore down a two-lane highway to pull her over after nearly causing a crash. And in the comments, people were absolutely not having it. The loudest reaction was pure outrage: if police can tap into these systems on what seems like the honor system, commenters asked, what exactly is stopping this from happening again?

One of the biggest hot takes was less about one bad officer and more about the whole surveillance machine. As one commenter put it, maybe we should not be building this kind of tracking setup so aggressively in the first place. Another added a grim Florida Keys twist: with basically one road in and out, these license plate readers are "unavoidable," which made the whole thing sound less like policing and more like a real-life horror plot with traffic cameras.

The thread also zeroed in on the chilling detail that the officer allegedly knew it was illegal and did it anyway. That sparked calls for serious punishment when police abuse powers the public gives them. There was even a darkly nerdy side discussion about image-detection tech and whether inventors are now watching their creations turn into monsters. The overall mood? A mix of anger, disbelief, and that uniquely online flavor of gallows humor: congratulations, we built the future, and apparently it stalks women on bridges.

Key Points

  • The article says officer Lamar Roman drove dangerously in the Florida Keys while pursuing a woman he was tracking, not a criminal suspect.
  • Roman allegedly first met the woman while working security on the set of Apple TV+ show *Bad Monkey* and later harassed her for personal details.
  • The article states he illegally accessed the woman’s vehicle information through DAVID, a Florida law-enforcement DMV database.
  • It says he placed her license plate on a surveillance hotlist tied to AI-powered license plate reader cameras to receive real-time alerts about her location.
  • The article presents the case as an example of how interconnected police databases and surveillance tools can be misused for personal stalking.

Hottest takes

"maybe we shouldn’t build out this infrastructure so aggressively" — smalltorch
"ALPR's in the Florida keys are unavoidable due to it basically being 1 road" — epoxia
"these tools operate on basically trust" — throwaway27448
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