Aided By Palantir, the LAPD Uses Predictive Policing to Monitor Specific People and Neighborhoods

Aided By Palantir, the LAPD Uses Predictive Policing to Monitor Specific People and Neighborhoods

"Police stops in Los Angeles are highly concentrated within just a small portion of the population, and the Los Angeles Police Department has been using targeted predictive policing technology that may exacerbate that focused scrutiny. That’s according to a report put out this week by the research and activist organization Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, which draws from the testimony of city residents and newly released police documents to paint a picture of a β€œracist feedback loop” where a β€œdisproportionate amount of police resources are allocated to historically hyper-policed communities.”

"Survey results included in the report suggest that very few people in Los Angeles bear the brunt of most police interactions: 2 percent of residents who responded to the survey reported being stopped by police between 11 and 30 times a week or more, while 76 percent of respondents reported never being stopped at all. The 300 survey respondents were distributed across geography, race, age, and gender. In focus groups, people who lived in areas heavily targeted by police described a state of constant surveillance. Asking β€œhow often do I see police in my area is like asking me how many times do I see a bird in the day,” said one resident."

CDTA Routes – January 2018

This interactive map shows the routing of CDTA buses. Unfortunately the way this map was made, the lowest numbered bus routes are overlaid over the higher laid bus routes, but it's an over the whole system.