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Security Cameras Please Police, Disturb Civil Libertarians
NEW YORK (AP) – Six could be seen peering out from a chain drug store on
Broadway. One protruded awkwardly from the awning of a fast-food restaurant.
A super-sized, domed version hovered like a flying saucer outside Columbia University.
All were surveillance cameras and – to the dismay of civil libertarians
and with the approval of law enforcement – they’ve been multiplying
at a dizzying rate all over Manhattan.
“
As many as we find, we miss so many more,” Alex Stone-Tharp, 21, said
on a recent afternoon while combing the streets, clipboard in hand, counting
cameras
in the scorching heat.
A student at Sarah Lawrence, Stone-Tharp is among a dozen college interns
enlisted by the New York Civil Liberties Union to bolster their side of a simmering
debate over whether surveillance cameras wrongly encroach on privacy, or effectively
combat crime and even terrorism – as in the London bombings investigation,
when the cameras were used to identify the bombers.
The interns have spent the summer stalking Big Brother – collecting
data for an upcoming NYCLU report on the proliferation of cameras trained on
streets,
sidewalks, and other public spaces.
At last count in 1998, the organization found 2,397 cameras used by a wide
variety of private businesses and government agencies throughout Manhattan.
This time,
after canvassing less than a quarter of the borough, the interns so far have
spotted more than 4,000.
The preliminary total “only provides a glimpse of the magnitude of the
problem,” said NYCLU Executive Director Donna Lieberman. “Nobody
has a clue how many there really are.”
But aside from sheer numbers, the NYCLU says it’s concerned about the increasing
use of newer, more powerful digital cameras that – unlike boxy older models – can
be controlled remotely and store more images.
The group expects to eventually publicize its findings to convince the public
that the cameras should be regulated to preserve privacy and guard against
abuses like racial profiling and voyeurism. Privacy advocates have cited a
case earlier
this year in which a police videotape that captured a suicide at a Bronx housing
development later turned up on a pornographic web site.
The NYCLU plans to post an interactive map on its web site pinpointing the
location of each surveillance camera, and it may include a feature for the
camera-shy
that would highlight the least-surveilled route between two points.
But the map could be obsolete on arrival.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority plans to spend up to $250 million
to install new surveillance cameras in the city’s vast subway system.
The New York Police Department also has requested funding for about 400 digital
video cameras to help combat
robberies and burglaries in busy commercial districts.
Police officers already watch live feeds from hundreds of cameras in city
housing projects throughout the five boroughs, where “they are a proven deterrent,” NYPD
spokesman Paul Brown said.
NYPD detectives also regularly rely on private security cameras to help solve
crimes. After makeshift grenades exploded outside the British consulate in
midtown Manhattan in May, they studied scores of videotape and concluded that
a still-unidentified
cyclist likely tossed the devices before fleeing.
In London, British police used videotape from some of their Underground system’s
6,000 cameras to help identify the suicide bombers on July 7 and the suspects
in a failed attack on July 21.
Elsewhere, Chicago recently spent roughly $5 million on a 2,000-camera system,
which has been credited for reducing crime to its lowest point in some 40 years.
In Washington, D.C., Homeland Security officials have announced plans to spend
$9.8 million for surveillance cameras and sensors on a rail line near the Capitol.
And in Philadelphia, where the city has increasingly relied on video surveillance,
cameras caught a murder and ultimately led to the capture of a suspect.
The NYCLU’s Lieberman concedes the cameras can help solve crimes. But she
claims there’s no proof that they deter terrorism or more mundane crime,
and some critics say it just pushes crime to where the cameras aren’t.
“
No one’s saying there should be no video cameras, but let’s not look
at them as a quick fix,” she said.
Whether the cameras threaten or protect society, the interns have encountered
hurdles in their counting.
At one point, uniformed officers outside the Federal Reserve Bank demanded
identification and warned, “if the information we had fell into the hands of terrorists,
it would be a problem,” said Peter Pantelis, 20, a student at the University
of Pennsylvania.
Susanna Groves, 19, of the University of Michigan, recalled finding herself
staring up an ornate streetlight, convinced a hidden camera was snapping pictures
of
her.
“
I know I’m getting paranoid,” she said. “But I also know
there are a lot of cameras out there.”
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