What happens when surveillance grows faster than the law meant to restrain it? In this episode, Justin sits down with Paul Avelar, attorney at the Institute for Justice, to unpack how modern surveillance technologies, especially automatic license plate reader cameras, are reshaping privacy, constitutional rights, and the balance of power between citizens and the government. From quiet local contracts to nationwide databases, this conversation reveals how systems built in the name of safety can quietly become tools of pervasive tracking.
Key Moments:
This episode challenges the assumption that surveillance is only a problem for criminals or future administrations we don’t trust. It asks listeners to reconsider how much privacy is lost when data is collected indefinitely, shared broadly, and used without probable cause. If you care about constitutional rights, government accountability, civil liberties, or simply the idea of being left alone in a free society, this conversation is essential listening.
Tune in to hear these hard-hitting questions. The answers are vital because they affect us all.
Follow Justin and the pod: @truthbefoundpodcast
Link to Justin’s agency, AIA: https://azprivateinvestigator.com/
Institute for Justice: https://ij.org/
About the Fourth Amendment work: https://ij.org/issues/ijs-project-on-the-4th-amendment/
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution: https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/amendment-4/