http://www.wbay.com/Global/story.asp?s=2776926If you're ticketed by Green Bay police, you'll get more than a fine. You'll get fingerprinted, too. It's a new way police are cracking down on crime. If you're caught speeding or playing your music too loud, or other crimes for which you might receive a citation, Green Bay police officers will ask for your drivers license and your finger. You'll be fingerprinted right there on the spot. The fingerprint appears right next to the amount of the fine.
Police say it's meant to protect you -- in case the person they're citing isn't who they claim to be. But not everyone is sold on that explanation
Citizens do have the right to say no. "They could say no and not have to worry about getting arrested," defense attorney Jackson Main said. "On the other hand, I'm like everybody else. When a police officer tells me to do something, I'm going to do it whether I have the right to say no or not." That's exactly why many drivers are uneasy about the fine print in this fingerprinting policy.
Police stress that the prints are just to make sure you are who you claim to be and do not go into any kind of database; they simply stay on the ticket for future reference if the identity is challenged
http://www.libertyforum.org/showflat.php?Cat=&Board=ll_chat&Number=293254661&view=collapsed&sb=5&o=21&part=GREEN BAY, Wis. - Police are getting rid of a new policy that had officers seeking a fingerprint from traffic violators, following public outcry against the idea during the two weeks it was in effect.
Officials said the policy would have prevented about a half-dozen people a year from being wrongly jailed because of the increase in people using false names and fake identification. Authorities stressed the fingerprint collection was voluntary and wouldn't be used to build a database, as some residents had feared.
Cmdr. Ken Brodhagen said the department decided to modify the policy after it was the subject of criticism on talk radio and through e-mails to the department.
"A lot it had to do with Big Brother: 'Oh yeah, right, you're not putting it into a database,"' he said.