Man exposes giant yellow pods with cameras stationed on Arizona road. Then he takes a second look: ‘explain to me and there’s a cable going in the backside’

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A TikTok video posted by @dadsgonelive shows two unusual yellow devices installed along the side of a road. The video, which is captioned “What is this Arizona?”, was filmed by a man who says he noticed the devices while driving and stopped to take a closer look. The clip shows him walking around the objects and narrating what he was seeing. The devices, as seen in the video, appear to be large, barrel-shaped units with a bright yellow exterior and a black lid. Each unit has a rectangular opening on its side that contains what looks like a black camera unit with multiple lenses and lights. The driver said the setup gave him the impression that the devices were watching passing traffic. “I noticed this camera staring at me,” the driver said in the video. He then moved to the other side of one of the devices and pointed out what appeared to be another camera unit, saying, “There’s a camera poking on both sides. You’re not slick. What is this, Arizona? Explain to me and there’s a cable going in the backside.” Two identical devices spotted along the roadside, connected by a cable that disappears into the desert brush After showing the camera units on one device, the driver pulled back to show a wider view of the area. According to the video, two identical yellow devices were visible, spaced some distance apart along the same stretch of road. @dadsgonelive What is this Arizona? ♬ original sound – Dads Gone Live The driver did not identify the specific road or provide a location beyond a general reference to Arizona. This isn’t the first time a social media post from Arizona has sparked questions about roadside activity, like this custody battle over dumped belongings. A reverse image search of the device on Google appears to suggest that it’s a TrafFix Big Sandy 48000 Series Impact Attenuator Sand Barrel. Similar devices appear to have been spotted in the same area before. Recording suspicious encounters on public roads has become a common way for people to document and question what they see, as this cyclist did with a driver. A Facebook post by a page called Tucson Community Police Scanner, shared by a user named Priscilla Castillo on May 24, showed what appear to be identical yellow barrel-shaped units stationed along a road in Tucson, Arizona.  The post was titled “Traffic cones with hidden cameras record license plates | Tucson, AZ,” and included the caption, “Did you know these traffic cones have a hidden camera that records license plates???” The post included multiple photos showing the devices up close, including one image that appeared to show a camera unit with multiple lenses inside the opening of one of the yellow barrels.  According to an investigation by the Arizona Mirror, devices matching that description are apparently part of a broader network of covert automated license plate readers, or ALPRs, built by U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Drug Enforcement Administration across Arizona.  Per the Mirror’s reporting, the cameras are disguised in various ways, including inside orange traffic cones, yellow barrels designed to look like crash cushions, speed trap signs, and behind overhead highway signs. They added that emails between CBP and the Arizona Department of Transportation showed that ADOT had asked CBP to stop using orange cones, as they are associated with construction zones and could confuse drivers, and that CBP was said to be shifting toward the large yellow barrel disguise. According to the Mirror’s investigation, the cameras are not limited to areas near the U.S.-Mexico border. Multiple cameras were reportedly found more than 100 miles from the border, including one purportedly located just outside Apache Junction, another near Buckeye, and a third near the town of Maricopa.  CBP’s jurisdiction is generally understood to extend 100 miles from the border, though a CBP spokesperson told the Mirror that other federal laws allow the agency to operate anywhere in the United States. In a statement to the Arizona Mirror, a CBP spokesperson said the agency uses license plate readers “to help identify threats and disrupt criminal networks,” adding that their use “is governed by a stringent, multilayered policy framework, as well as federal law and constitutional protections.”  The spokesperson also said that for national security reasons, CBP does not disclose the specific number or locations of its license plate readers, stating that doing so “would enable drug smugglers and other bad actors to circumvent detection and tamper with LPR equipment.” The video drew a range of responses in the comments section. One user, Dr Revo, suggested the devices are “specialized, portable traffic monitoring stations,” adding that they are “commonly used by transportation departments (like ADOT in Arizona) to collect data on traffic patterns.” Dr Revo also said that “despite the enclosure making them look somewhat covert, they are standard equipment for gathering essential data to plan road maintenance and infrastructure improvements.” Not all commenters agreed with the driver’s apparent suspicion surrounding the devices. A user pushed back, writing, “These aren’t flock cameras. Do your research,” suggesting the devices had a more straightforward explanation than some viewers may have assumed. Another commenter took a more lighthearted approach, writing, “free solar panel marker…follow the cable for some free solar panels.”