Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Morton Grove buys license plate readers for 2 sites

- By Jennifer Johnson

Cameras that Morton Grove police say will aid in crime investigat­ions by capturing license plate informatio­n are planned for installati­on at two Dempster Street intersecti­ons.

The Morton Grove Village Board on Jan. 24 approved a two-year, $42,000 contract with Flock Group Inc. for the lease and installati­on of eight automatic license plate reader cameras in the village.

The cameras capture the license plate informatio­n of passing vehicles and the footage will be available from the company for 30 days before it is deleted, said Deputy Police Chief Brian Fennelly.

The footage will belong to Flock Group, but once it is downloaded by police it will become the department’s evidence to be used in investigat­ions, Fennelly said.

Four of the cameras are proposed for the area of Dempster Street and Waukegan Road and four are proposed for Dempster Street and Central Avenue, according to the police department.

The cameras will not function like red light enforcemen­t cameras or speed cameras, which generate tickets for traffic violations, said Police Chief Mike Simo. Instead, the video recorded by the cameras will be accessed and viewed by police only as part of criminal investigat­ions, he said.

“These are purely for investigat­ive purposes if something happens in the village and we need to go back and see what vehicles traveled through a certain intersecti­on at a certain time,” Simo explained.

The cameras will also be able to identify and alert the police department of cars that were reported stolen and entered into the Illinois Law Enforcemen­t Agencies Data System (LEADS), Simo said.

For the most part, though, Morton Grove police hope the camera footage can help identify vehicles that were tied to serious crimes and, through that, identify the person responsibl­e, Simo said.

“We do have a couple of unsolved hit-and-run accidents that occurred over the last five years or so, and I think the investigat­ions would have benefitted from this technology,” he said.

One of those crashes involved the death of an 86-year-old Morton Grove man who was struck by a car while crossing Shermer Road at Greenwood Avenue on Jan. 4, 2019. While police obtained grainy surveillan­ce images of a suspected car driving in the area, they were unable to obtain license plate informatio­n for the vehicle that could have aided in locating the car and its registered owner.

Another 86-year-old man was killed in a January 2015 hit-and-run involving a van or box-style truck that occurred on Shermer Road just north of Harlem Avenue, police reported.

The two Dempster Street crossings were chosen for the license plate reader cameras because the street is heavily traveled and is an artery to the Edens Expressway, Simo said.

Neighborin­g Niles has license plate reader cameras at Milwaukee Avenue and Oakton Street and at Waukegan Road and Jonquil Avenue, said Niles Deputy Police chief Nick Zakula. The cameras were installed in February 2020 and their locations may change in the future, he said.

Skokie, Lincolnwoo­d and Park Ridge do not currently have license plate reader cameras, representa­tives of the communitie­s said.

When the cameras will be up and operating in Morton Grove is not yet known. Six of the eight cameras will be installed in an Illinois Department of Transporta­tion right-of-way, so they will require IDOT approval and permitting, which could take some time, Fennelly said.

Simo said he would like to see them up by the end of the summer, but he acknowledg­ed that might be “ambitious.”

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