Saturday, May 3, 2014

Police departments also violating U.S. citizens rights

  1. Fox News ‎- 29 minutes ago
    The NSA isn't the only government agency raising concerns about electronic privacy. Local police departments are coming under similar ...

    Issues

    The next NSA? Police departments under scrutiny for phone, license plate surveillance

    FILE: A motorist whose car has its two front wheels opposing each other is pulled over by a policeman for a moving traffic violation.Reuters
    The NSA isn’t the only government agency raising concerns about electronic privacy. Local police departments are coming under similar scrutiny – not only for using spying technology, but for hiding their use from the public.
    At least 25 police departments now use what is known as "Stingray," a briefcase-sized box that swallows up cell phone data within a mile radius.
    More than one in three large police departments are also using license-plate readers, which can record every plate -- even on a four-lane highway – from vehicles going at speeds of up to 150 miles per hour.
    The technology is a remarkable crime-fighting tool, according to former D.C. homicide detective Rod Wheeler.
    "Not just automobile thefts, but homicides, all kinds of robberies, so the technology is definitely something that's an asset to us," he said.
    But in a May 1 article, Wired magazine reported that Harris Corporation, maker of the Stingray, and Vigilant Solutions, which sells license-plate readers, holds its police department buyers to vows of secrecy.
    It reported that Vigilant's terms of service says: "This prohibition is specifically intended to prohibit users from cooperating with any media outlet.”
    Lon Anderson, with AAA, raised concerns about this provision.
    "It's very worrisome,” he said. “I think we want police agencies to be as transparent as possible. There shouldn't be anything to hide here."
    He added: "They are using technology that are supported widely because of their proven ability to reduce crime."
    Vigilant today told Fox News that its confidentiality policy has changed and that the Wired article was outdated. It said that buyers only need to "check" with Vigilant now before they discuss the technology with the media.
    It added in a statement: "This is a common practice in the area of law enforcement technology, since criminals often manipulate publicly available information to avoid detection and capture."
    But the two technologies raise broader questions about 4th Amendment protections. Last year, then-Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli issued an opinion on license-plate readers that said data cannot be collected unless directly related to a criminal case.
    The opinion was not binding. Many jurisdictions in Virginia and beyond still retain the data for years.
    The last major legislation governing electronic privacy was passed in 1986, before these technologies existed. Courts have ruled differently regarding their use. Settled law is difficult to arrive at, as technological change is turning faster than the wheels of justice.
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    Actually, I blame the technology itself not the police departments. Whether it is the NSA or police departments all governments resemble the rule of "Absolute power corrupts absolutely". When guns were invented people used them on other people. The same will always be true of technology. It only takes one policeman with PTSD from the horrific things he or she has seen to make a bad decision which ends the rights of thousands and thousands or even millions of people now.
     
    The very existence of the technology to do this is to blame and I predict this kind of technology will not save civilization it will end civilization because people won't trust police ever now because they can't after reading stuff like this.  This is 100 or 1000 times worse than having to watch police walk around all the time with sub machine assault rifles. Reading this is sort of like police walking around with grenade launchers aimed at the public and the public knows it.

    This is how civilizations end.
     

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