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US Doles Out Millions For Street Cameras
Local Efforts Raise Privacy Alarms
WASHINGTON -- The Department of Homeland Security is funneling millions of dollars to local governments nationwide for purchasing high-tech video camera networks, accelerating the rise of a "surveillance society" in which the sense of freedom that stems from being anonymous in public will be lost, privacy rights advocates warn.
Since 2003, the department has handed out some $23 billion in federal grants to local governments for equipment and training to help combat terrorism. Most of the money paid for emergency drills and upgrades to basic items, from radios to fences. But the department also has doled out millions on surveillance cameras, transforming city streets and parks into places under constant observation.
The department will not say how much of its taxpayer-funded grants have gone to cameras. But a Globe search of local newspapers and congressional press releases shows that a large number of new surveillance systems, costing at least tens and probably hundreds of millions of dollars, are being simultaneously installed around the country as part of homeland security grants.
In the last month, cities that have moved forward on plans for surveillance networks financed by the Homeland Security Department include St. Paul, which got a $1.2 million grant for 60 cameras for downtown; Madison, Wis., which is buying a 32-camera network with a $388,000 grant; and Pittsburgh, which is adding 83 cameras to its downtown with a $2.58 million grant.
Small towns are also getting their share of the federal money for surveillance to thwart crime and terrorism.
Recent examples include Liberty, Kan. (population 95), which accepted a federal grant to install a $5,000 G2 Sentinel camera in its park, and Scottsbluff, Neb. (population 14,000), where police used a $180,000 Homeland Security Department grant to purchase four closed-circuit digital cameras and two monitors, a system originally designed for Times Square in New York City.
"We certainly wouldn't have been able to purchase this system without those funds," police Captain Brian Wasson told the Scottsbluff Star-Herald.
Other large cities and small towns have also joined in since 2003. Federal money is helping New York, Baltimore, and Chicago build massive surveillance systems that may also link thousands of privately owned security cameras. Boston has installed about 500 cameras in the MBTA system, funded in part with homeland security funds.
Marc Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said Homeland Security Department is the primary driver in spreading surveillance cameras, making their adoption more attractive by offering federal money to city and state leaders.
Homeland Security Department spokesman Russ Knocke said that it is difficult to say how much money has been spent on surveillance cameras because many grants awarded to states or cities contained money for cameras and other equipment. Knocke defended the funding of video networks as a valuable tool for protecting the nation. "We will encourage their use in the future," he added.
But privacy rights advocates say that the technology is putting at risk something that is hard to define but is core to personal autonomy. The proliferation of cameras could mean that Americans will feel less free because legal public behavior -- attending a political rally, entering a doctor's office, or even joking with friends in a park -- will leave a permanent record, retrievable by authorities at any time.
Businesses and government buildings have used closed-circuit cameras for decades, so it is nothing new to be videotaped at an ATM machine. But technology specialists say the growing surveillance networks are potentially more powerful than anything the public has experienced.
Until recently, most surveillance cameras produced only grainy analog feeds and had to be stored on bulky videotape cassettes. But the new, cutting-edge cameras produce clearer, more detailed images. Moreover, because these videos are digital, they can be easily transmitted, copied, and stored indefinitely on ever-cheaper hard-drive space.
In addition, police officers cannot be everywhere at once, and in the past someone had to watch a monitor, limiting how large or powerful a surveillance network could be.
But technicians are developing ways to use computers to process real-time and stored digital video, including license-plate readers, face-recognition scanners, and software that detects "anomalous behavior." Although still primitive, these technologies are improving, some with help from research grants by the Homeland Security Department's Science and Technology Directorate.
"Being able to collect this much data on people is going to be very powerful, and it opens people up for abuses of power," said Jennifer King, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley who studies privacy and technology. "The problem with explaining this scenario is that today it's a little futuristic. [A major loss of privacy] is a low risk today, but five years from now it will present a higher risk."
As this technological capacity evolves, it will be far easier for individuals to attract police suspicion simply for acting differently and far easier for police to track that person's movement closely, including retracing their steps backwards in time. It will also create a greater risk that the officials who control the cameras could use them for personal or political gain, specialists said.
The expanded use of surveillance in the name of fighting terrorism has proved controversial in other arenas, as with the recent debate over President Bush's programs for eavesdropping on Americans' international phone calls and e-mails without a warrant.
But public support for installing more surveillance cameras in public places, both as a means of fighting terrorism and other crime, appears to be strong. Last month, an ABC News/Washington Post poll found that 71 percent of Americans favored increased use of surveillance cameras, while 25 percent opposed it.
Still, some homeland security specialists point to studies showing that cameras are not effective in deterring crime or terrorism. Although video can be useful in apprehending suspects after a crime or attack, the specialists say that the money used to buy and maintain cameras would be better spent on hiring more police.
That view is not universal. David Heyman, the homeland security policy director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, pointed out that cameras can help catch terrorists before they have time to launch a second attack. Several recent failed terrorist attacks in England were followed by quick arrests due in part to surveillance video.
Earlier this month, Senator Joe Lieberman, independent of Connecticut, proposed an amendment that would require the Homeland Security Department to develop a "national strategy" for the use of surveillance cameras, from more effectively using them to thwart terrorism to establishing rules to protect civil liberties.
"A national strategy for [surveillance cameras] use would help officials at the federal, state, and local levels use [surveillance] systems effectively to protect citizens, while at the same time making sure that appropriate civil liberties protections are implemented for the use of cameras and recorded data," Lieberman said.
© 2007 The Boston Globe
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41 Comments so far
Show AllIsn't it fascinating how the republicans keep talking about gov't intrusion into our lives, especially when the democrats try and put some health care initiative in place, but THEY are the ones putting up cameras in public spots of spy on us?
Republicans are the most duplicitous, two faced, lying, intrusive, and unAmerican scum on the planet. Don't like that assessment? Prove me wrong! I DARE you. And all I have to do is to point to articles like this that prove my point every time.
Not so long ago, I can recall criticism of China and the Soviet Bloc for the use of surveillance cameras, among other similar devices, to control their citizens. Such activities, it was claimed, was tangible evidence of the failings and dangers of communism. Now we can afford surveillance cameras at the same time we cannot afford to offer citizens health insurance or a decent wage. When will we have had enough of this nonsense? When will the citizenry realize what is happening and act? Some say it may already be too late. I say the longer we delay, the quicker we will find ourselves penniless and enslaved.
Worthless crap for a frightened society...I had no idea there were so many frightened people in the US...or good camera lobbyists
And who will view these monitors or the accumulated miles and miles of video images that start to degrade the moment they're recorded and where is all this stuff stored and who will maintain the equipment...it's worthiness and novelty will wear off like any new electronic gadget and ultimately migrate to the nearest landfill
It's all too overwhelming and a total waste of cash..."watch out what you wish for"
Between the cameras and the favors informants will get to turn in their neighbors this will be a fine place to live. I suggest listening devices and scent detectors to catch people burping and farting in the good neighborhoods too.
The fact there are blocks and blocks in any big American city where legitimate criminals operate in open defiance of the law escapes these fascist pigs.
Who is going to install, maintain and respond to cameras in very high crime neighborhoods where the fire department waits for police protection to respond to a fire?
Welcome to the final phase of 2 party fascism in the US. Eavesdropping ok'd last week, cameras this week. It's not Orwell's dystopia, Big Brother IS watching and listening.
Change is not going to come from blogging, online petitioning or voting.
Afghani-style burqas anyone?
Well I visited England where spy cameras abound. But guess what ? Street Criminals are not always dumb.
They know the cameras are there .So mostly you catch a bunch of drunks, after the pubs close. Instead of putting cameras on public streets use the cameras at high risk facilities to bolster safety. How about setting a few on the understructure of bridges so we know when they are about to collapse. Better us of money.
We are conducting a pubic opinion poll, to determine if you believe the cameras are made in China,___ or are made by a sub-contractor of Halliburton.
The results of the poll will be presented after a short fifteen minute news break___where you will see several stupid commercials, including at least three advertisments for__HEAD ON__ APPLY DIRECTLY TO THE FORHEAD.
HEAD ON is used by both President Bush and VP Cheney and their band of loyal gophers and all of congress except one mis-guided lefty whose name is difficult to spell.
I'm all for surveillance cameras,,,in the White House, the Congressional offices, the Pentagon offices, the State Department offices, and the Justice Department!!!!
Hey, WTF (Where's The Freedom)? Search and destroy the terrorists; NOT spy on US all. As for LIEberman, just another despotic DEM jackass to shun along with the banana republicans!
Welcome to the Orwellian society that we in Britain have had for some years - more cctv on our streets than in any other nation in Europe! That coupled with compulsory ID/biometrics (for which the individual must pay!)puts us well ahead in the surveillance game. Those corageous men and women from two world wars must be spinning furiously in their graves at the loss of the individual freedoms they fought and died for. SHAME ON OUR SO-CALLED DEMOCRACIES..oh yeah, it is one thing to have these spies in the midst of a benign government but a future dictator will thank those who provided the apparatus. In the US or in the UK. these things are paid for WITH OUT TAXES and not in our name!
Didn't I hear that they (so called Homeland Security) did not have enough money to build a fence along the border with Mexico, but since 2003 they had 23 billion dollars available for cameras in our cities and towns.
It seems to me like they are more worried about American citizens than anyone else.
cutting edge: Thank you..
Change in not going to come from blogging, online petitioning or voting.
Ah yes, BIG BROTHER.......
JUST BECAUSE YOU ARE PARANOID, IT DOESN'T MEAN THEY AREN'T WATCHING YOU!!
If your average Joe can use Google Earth to zero in on a person's home, just imagine how much deeper this government is zeroing in on all of us right now.......
TIME TO HIT THE STREETS FOLKS!
Big brother is watching you
"Recent examples include Liberty, Kan. (population 95), which accepted a federal grant to install a $5,000 G2 Sentinel camera in its park, and Scottsbluff, Neb. (population 14,000), where police used a $180,000 Homeland Security Department grant to purchase four closed-circuit digital cameras and two monitors, a system originally designed for Times Square in New York City."
Liberty and Scottsbluff—but especially Liberty—are notorious terrorist havens. Republicans are rife there.
We could all go naked.
Ok, take a traffic camera, like one on a red light. When you get to court, there's NO recourse - you're in the picture, you're guilty. PERIOD. At least, that's what the judge told me and everyone else. EVERYONE got the maximum fine, no matter how good their excuse was, because THERE WAS NO EXCUSE! There literally was no reason to pay a judge; it was all for profit - one camera can earn $16,000 per month for a city.
And they were protested early when the cameras were first adopted, but no one cares any more.
That kind of philosophy will spread to cameras in the park. Just watch.
QUOTE . . . malatesta August 12th, 2007 1:51 pm
I'm all for surveillance cameras,,,in the White House, the Congressional offices, the Pentagon offices, the State Department offices, and the Justice Department!!!!UNQUOTE
EXACTLY what I was thinking -- !!!
Well, next flooded out city, we'll have better pictures of those floating around in the water waiting for Homeland Security to help them -- waiting and waiting and waiting . . . and waiting.
We already have satellite pictures which could tell us
things who brought the stuff in to wire the WTC for explosion/demolition?
Looking at the markets this past week, I can only wonder if Bushco will be relying on another Great Depression to help usher in their dictatorship?
Look for us all to be "chipped" soon, like a dog or cat. DHS will know exactly where we all are, night or day. And that guy picked up on camera who doesn't correlate to a chip, he'll be arrested on the next block.
Well, if you're innocent, you'll have nothing to worry about...
What terrorism?
You mean the free speech that the Bush administration seems to think of as terrorism?
Right now in the United Kingdom the government is planning to use anti-terrorist tactics on a planned global warming demonstration.
The tow governments seem to be rebelling against and terrorizing their own people.
the public should now be able to intrude into the lives of its public officials. thanks to this increased spying on the general public, the public will now be more inclined to spy on its leaders.
don't be shocked when the secret listening device planted in the presiden't office records evidence of Bush's co-conspiracy with Al Qaeda and Bin Laden.
Oh, and don't be surprised when ur belief that a president can only serve two terms in office is shattered.
Oh, and don't forget that when the draft is re-instated Canada won't be accepting immigrants and the fence in mexico will be more for keeping up in, than keeping out mexicans, which is a huge source of revenue for business.
Oh, and don't forget to answer the door to the homeland security agents when they come knocking to inform you and your family that you must REGISTER at a resident facility (detention camp) or face prison.
And don't forget to fill out the nifty forms they give you to list, in detail, all of your family valuable and to surrender any guns you may own.
And especially don't forget that this is to protect you. you are safer in prison, especially when the death squads start roaming the streets (private security contractors).
This message has been brought to you by nobody in particular but someone nonetheless.
I need your help i purchased almost all of the watchdogmedia's except dot com the only one i have operating is dot us. So i tried to turn the camera around on the office ers but no one would talk as you will see in the video at watchdogmedia(dot)us. I don't want to be part of the problem but part of the solution to help the oppressed. I know that there is the human right to food, water, shelter and care and everything else is a drug. So who will be looking out for us when the drug dealers impose their monopoly on the market. I know how long it takes to build shelter and have a good idea how long it doesn't take for these high tech farms to produce food for the people, so why does it take so long to buy our freedom? Can we work together? Thanks brian@watchdogmedia.us
So -- which corporations made out "big time" on this deal? We need to know which Dems voted for this and help defeat them in 2008 or whenever they're up for re-election.
Everybody is guilty of something. So I guess it is fair to be monitored all the time.
I read a story called "time is money".
In this story you had a chip implanted at birth . Your parents could put time on your chip till you got old enough to work to add your own time. Everything you used like food and water cost time. When you spent your time you were killed by the chip.
Think someone read this story to Bu$h the inferior?
Is there a way out of this nightmare that is upon us?
We need a leader, but the cards are heavily stacked against us.
They have the spies, they will kill the Internet and the firepower to take us all out and more importantly the desire to do so.
Bush is waiting for any little reason to call martial law, then me boys its off to those cozy "detention" camps.
So don't be upset with all the killing of our soldiers by the Iraqis, we have invaded, for we will be doing the same thing soon.
Plan ahead.........
Why has no one ever questioned why is it necessary for Bush and his administration to convene at the Crawford ranch just about weekly, at the public's expense, to conduct business and form policies out from under the watchful eye of the capital's
surveillance cameras and conversation recording devices. Could this be a Republican party attempt not to make the same mistakes Nixon made?
We must always "think outside of the box" when dealing with these and all politicians. They have agendas that are not favorable to the American public.
What channel is Dick Cheney's camera on?
Elected officials are to be held to a higher standard. Our usurpers are not held to ANY standard.
After reading all of the fine comments, I'm starting to like the idea for being watched. Especially if we did all run naked like Cino sugessted. Like some said, if you're not guilty of anything, don't worry. Crime would come to screeching halt.
The chip idea sounds real good too, if that is hooked into global positioning, wow, think of it. Your social security number, birth date, name and chip ID. Thousands of workers in India monitorng the computers. I Like it.
It fits right in with the loss of our bill of rights and the Constitution, as Bush said, those are just pieces of paper.___They are now. Smile, your're on candid camera.
I'd like it a lot better though, if we had our Constitution and Bill of Rights back and shit canned the spy cameras.
ok everyone...smile for the camera and bend over
I think this is incorrect. The US Government under Bush does not spend money on anything. Our tax revenues do not cover our spending so we charge it and leave it for the next generation to pay for. Our congress, in approving legislation, does not pass a revenue bill that gets the money for their programs. We all live on the credit card.
I draw the peace sign and give the camera the one fingered salute.
Not to dang "Funny" how the old "fictional" movies and books are becoming true!
ya'll remember to wear your disguises when you step out the door to do anything "political" (you know, take a leak in the park, much less smoke a j, or heaven forbid, protest something, or help somebody declared an "unperson" by one of dumbya's executive orders.)
this surveillance crap has been going on for a long time, but how quickly the american people roll over!
it's always cheery to note these public/private partnerships about this shit. what's it called when gov't & corporate interests merge? that "f" word, that freaking italian "f" word...fasc something...wait...i'm being monitored. the "f" word is freedom.
Who are these cameras for? Terrorists? Yeah ok. I forgot that they're hiding behind trash cans in the alley waiting to jump out and attack any minute.
Here's a news flash - There aren't any terrorists. ZERO. ZIP. NADA. You heard me right. It's all BS. Terrorism is a method not a way of life or a religion. It is impossible to declare a war on a method or ideal. When somebody says "War On Terror" it makes them sound like an idiot.
The cameras are for US, plain and simple. The detention facilites are for US. The truth is hard, cold, and painful. There IS a war, but it's not in Iraq.
As the effort to own us continues I have to ask, what in the hell will it take for us to just say fuck it and stop supporting these people? Can somebody imagine a scenario that would compel US citizens to stand up for themselves? If so, please elaborate...
There is such a scenario. It is quite simple really.
1. Let's stop bitching about what is and is not happening. Spend time and resources constructively.
We cannot fight destruction with destruction. Fight destruction with CREATION. The sytem that you and I lived under is collapsing.
2. We could easily build a new system from the "rubble" of the old.
Let's build a society, start by building community. It wouldn't be hard to build it better, healthier, more appealing than the one we have. The old system thrives on wastefullness, no... it depends on it. China is right now building a new system, and they are quite literally building it out of our garbage.
If we start now we can have it built before the old system collapses, and avert disaster for an entire world of people.
"watch what you get for pretending the danger's
not real...."
--- Pink Floyd.........
What has become a crime deterrent has now become a snoop toy. I had a neighbor place two or more surveillance cameras in her yard, but the camera could cover all of my back and front yard, as well into my bedroom window. What little privacy I did have in my backyard was gone and all of my goings and visitors were taped for both her and her friends to view on tv. When I complained to the cops or asked an attorney for help, I was warned that I had no rights to force her to take down the cameras. But she did. So I can be taped all day and night no matter where I go. Is this what will become of what little privacy we do have when cameras tape all of our activities. The article didn't mention that the equipment also includes audio. A cop can park more than a block away and still hear your conversations. Neighbors are next.
i live in lynnwood, washington, just north of seattle. we have these cameras at every single traffic light
I am proof these cameras work. I saw them being installed and now a year later we have our first arrests...2 juveniles tagging(spray painting) waterfront park. I am not sure if they are Canadians or if they used a boat to get here? Eh?
And a few days ago DHS drove buy clicking away at the license plates of fisherman on the pier and tourists. Little late since their already in the country wouldn't you say?
And yet we can't afford health care for all.
These cameras should work well in conjunction with Blackwater U S A when they come back to hunt down the 10's of thousands of poor homeless, jobless, hungry, starving, cold- Americans, to put them out of their misery.
In this link below is the Right coast on the US/Canadian border, bangs brother in the boat. Keep in mind the Border patrol keeps their new Osama Killin boats near here, Homeland Security too, the Coast Guard as well. The first 2 have SUV's zooming around sucking up Iraqi derived gasoline. What a big political show pre election 2008, and waste of money/oil. And, they all go home at night and sleep...LOL!
http://www.bang-bangs.com/invades.html