Police departments across the U.S. are now using Palantir Gotham, software originally designed for intelligence agencies, to collect and analyze massive amounts of civilian data.
With a single search (a name, license plate, or phone number), officers can access or infer:
• Past addresses and known associates
• Vehicle movements via license-plate readers
• Photos, tattoos, scars, arrests, and field interviews
• Social media and financial data when obtained or subpoenaed
• Algorithmic “risk scores” based on patterns, not convictions
It’s sold as crime-fighting.
But in practice, it creates centralized digital profiles of millions of Americans, many of whom have never been charged with a crime, often with little public oversight or transparency.
And here’s the truth history keeps teaching us:
Once this kind of system exists, it never shrinks.
It only expands.
History has a name for infrastructures like this.