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.
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.