Comments

1
You assume you live in a democracy, not a corporation.
2
There's really only one solution: Use the drones to follow the SPD and record their every move. To ensure that they maintain the peace in such a way that also respects the human rights of the citizens.
3
I'm with #2. Make the drones only available to Internal Affairs (or whatever SPD has that is similar).
4
http://downwithdrones.com/

(Posted for entertainment purposes only. Because obviously, interfering with a police drone would be very illegal and just plain wrong.)
5
I'm having a hard time getting worked up about these drones. They look like something a model airplane enthusiast would take to Gas Works Park on a Sunday. I don't see them picking off anarchists one by one.
6
@2 Or use the SPD drones to track the FBI, NSA, TSA, ATF and CIA drones.
7
@4,5
Are those little drawings from the cartoon South Park? They are very cute!!
8
Someone at this afternoon's hearing called this a "slippery slope" and they are right.

We were warned 50 years ago by then President Eisenhower about the growth of the military-industrial complex. Nothing was done and we are now on a permanent war footing with our economy dependent on those corporations.

Our civilian law enforcement are acquiring military armaments and being trained as military to consider citizens expressing their first amendment right of free speech and dissent as a threat.

Wake up sheeple! It doesn't have to be this way.
9
"public really doesn't like them"

Hate to burst your bubble but a few screaming anarchists and failed hippies are not the 'public'.
10
OMG, it's technology that I don't understand! Everybody freak out!

Meanwhile, the police can already record you with the same commercial off the shelf camera that would be on a quadrocopter (with a flight time of 15 minutes) by holding it in their hands.

The police drive around with cameras all the time. They fly helicopters that can stay in the air longer than it takes for you to watch a TV show. They can fly a plane over your home and take pictures. If you're worried about surveillance you need to pass laws making it harder, not one particular incarnation of it.

tl;dr this is a legal problem, not a technical one
11
So why are drones different from police helicopters?
12
Seattle PD doesn't have a helicopter. I bet they're one of the largest cities in the country that doesn't operate one. If drones are cheaper to operate than a helicopter, then why not use them the same way SPD would a helicopter?
13
Lessons from the Past:
The Securitate in Romania developed such a powerful apparatus for monitoring the citizens that 1 in 3 Romanians reported on their peers to the Secutitate. If you wanted to type a letter, you had to get the ribbon from the cops, and return it to them afterward. They would look at the ribbon to see what you had typed. If you wanted to talk on the phone, you would always hear this not at all subtle click indicating that there was a third party on the line. After a while, you developed aparanoid sense Romanians called "the cop in your head", a condition where you assumed that you were always being watched, wherever you were or whatever you were doing. Another thought process convinced you that nobody could ever confide in anyone, that nobody had a real friend, and that your own children might betray you-they frequently did. This made everyone an emotional cripple, and the scars are still evident when one interacts with someone who lived through that era.

Lessons from the Present:
The genie never goes back in the bottle. Once the atom bomb was built, despite ardent efforts from scientists, peace activists, Presidents, Prime Ministers, Nobel laureates and common people, the bomb just kept proliferating. Now, everybody's got enough to split the world in half a thousand times over. Germ warfare, chemical weapons, you can protest all you want, these horrors will never go away.the best we can do is limit their spread, and even that is Sisyphean. The genie never goes back in the fucking bottle.

Lessons from the Future:
If you look at a population pyramid for the US demarcated by age, you see that ours is top-heavy, meaning that at some point soon there will be more people over 85 than there will be under 14. As people grow older, they naturally become more risk-averse. This is partly because being risk-averse lends itself to longer life spans, and partly because the increasing vulnerability of old age prompts one to seek aid from the authorities. The elderly tend to favor law-and-order candidates, and are more willing to sacrifice civil liberties in favor of protection from threats real or perceived. This is why candidates can get elected by thumping on public safety, even though murder rates are at a historical low. Since 10,000 Americans turn 65 every hour, politicians will begin offering up ever more visible public safety measures to woo the aging vote.

When the Baby Boom was young, they protested against excessive government intrusion on the lives of citizens. Senator Frank Church's probe into FBI activities and FISA could only happen when the majority of voters were young and confident enough in their ability to protect themselves. Now that the Baby boom is old, you will see the opposite take place. This trend will continue until the Baby Boom dies off to the point where our population pyramid once again has a larger number of young than old.

Conclusion: We're fucked, and it will be a long time before it gets any better. Will it get as bad as it did with the Stasi or the Okrana? Who can say?
15
Can't fly at night or in heavily populated areas? That seems to preclude their use at all around Puget Sound for fighting crime.

16
15,

That was never the point. The point is to visibly appear the be fighting crime. People would never see the drones at night anyway, thus making them useless. People can see them during daylight, and the politicians want the people to see these drones and think, "Ah!The police are protecting me from criminals. I will vote for that mayor and that county commissioner and that governor and that president again, or for someone of that party if said politician is term-limited"

Fighting crime would make sense, if there was any crime to fight. Seattle is, statistically speaking, one of the safest cities in America. Our rates for sexual assault, murder, and assault and battery are very very low. We stand out in terms of car theft, that's the one area where we are worse than most cities. For the rest of it though, we look very good indeed.

That's the reality. But people don't vote based on reality, they vote based on perceived reality. And to be perceived as fighting crime, even if there isn't any to fight, makes you re-electable. McGinn is up for election against a formidable opponent. Gotta win the granny vote so Ed Murray doesn't get into City Hall.
17
SPD used to have helicopters but they crashed them.
18
Yeah, what 15 said.. Where does SPD have jurisdiction that IS NOT heavily populated
If you can't grow Cannabis because of restrictive zoning, then ZONE the drones so they can only fly over the cannabis farms...;-D
19
I'm sorry, why do we HAVE to have them? Does the city council not have the power to simply tell SPD "You may not use these", and then deny them any funding for storage, maintenance, training, or operation of drones, or prohibit SPD from storing them in the city?

Then, if the Feds want to ship us drones, and train us on them, awesome. The Feds can pay for their storage costs and dust collection in some hanger down at Sea-Tac airport.
20
yeah, NO FUCKING DRONES! Is that so hard to understand?
21
And so many thought all this nonsense was over with Bush. Ha!
22
I think everything recorded by drones should be immediately available publicly. That would keep the cops honest
23
@7 Yes. South Park avatar creator.

http://www.southparkstudios.com/avatar
24
what about the 5mil DHS just spent on surveillance cams to be installed from alki to shoreline? are we going to start putting them on wooded hiking trails next? c'mon slog; this is just wrong; please make some stink.
25
I got 20 angles in my carburetor! If the drones just get one of them the CIA won't let me have grape soda!!
26
This is our tax dollars at work. A drone manufacturer has sold thousands of these things to police agencies all over the country who have no idea what to do with them.
27
I like drones.

But why are we so scared of SPD taping us? And why do we assume the FBI/CIA aren't?
28
Each day, it's getting to be more like those sci fi films from the 60's and 70's.
just say NO to Drones in this city.
Enough with the surveillance already. This is too much.
29
@5, Gern wrote, "I'm having a hard time getting worked up about these drones. They look like something a model airplane enthusiast would take to Gas Works Park on a Sunday."

Please consider not what these $40,000 unmanned flying surveillance cameras look like today, but what the $1000 models will look like in ten years. Advances in technology are likely to outpace related legislation. If we don't get on top of this now, we're bound to find ourselves arguing that no, the police cannot simply station a drone over every block, even though their budget will accommodate the fleet.
30
@10, Sam wrote, The police drive around with cameras all the time. They fly helicopters that can stay in the air longer than it takes for you to watch a TV show. They can fly a plane over your home and take pictures."

The pervasiveness of each those methods of surveillance has a natural limiting factor: scarcity of in-person, human, operators. The stealthiness of them is someone limited by the size of them and the volume of noise they generate.

I don't want autonomous and/or remotely-operated police drones on the street any more than I want them in the sky.

"If you're worried about surveillance you need to pass laws making it harder, not one particular incarnation of it."

I agree. We should pass laws severely restricting our government's use of all remotely-operated surveillance machines. Until that happens, we should deal with the arrival of every new machine of the sort individually.
31
@11, Oof wrote, "So why are drones different from police helicopters?"

It's more practical to perform more intense recording of everything that everyone does once he steps outside with small, quieter, inexpensive, unmanned, flying surveillance cameras than it is to do so with police helicopters.

@12, Bax wrote, "If drones are cheaper to operate than a helicopter, then
why not use them the same way SPD would a helicopter?"


I think it is unlikely that we will be able to restrict the use of drones to tasks which are now accomplished by helicopter. Drones are not simply a less expensive replacement; they are a greater risk to our freedom to go about our lawful business in public without our government making records of our every move and storing them away forever. I do not want to live in a place like that.
32
Is there a meaningful distinction between a drone (controversial, symptomatic of the militarization of police), and a helicopter (uncontroversial, an accepted tool of law enforcement). I just plain don't see it. I'm comfortable if someone wants to argue on degrees, that drones go too far, but all I see is a way to, say, tail a vehicle without having to pay someone $100,000 a year to do it.

Much of the opposition I'm hearing is knee-jerk repugnance at the word "drone" and the inevitable association with there drone strikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, et al., or opposition to surveillance of public places. The first objection is ridiculous on its face (I'm not hearing opposition to airplanes because air strikes are an instrument off war in that region), the second is suspect given that there never has been a reasonable expectation of privacy in the public square. Given the proliferation of CCTVs for private security, cell phone cameras, not to mention GPS, that horse is already done gone out the door.
33
@31 Please point me to the article of the Constitution guaranteeing the right to be invisible. I appreciate not wanting to be constantly observed by the harsh microscope of the state, but even if the SPD had fifty drones, I'm still not seeing a slope that ends in a Two Minute Hateb and Batman shooting Boromir in the face.
34
@ 1 If that was true Romney would be President right now

Do we have an official poll on this or we just guessing when we say public doesn't like it based on one meeting.
35
Brendan's report of today's meeting on Harell's police drone authorization bill is encouraging, but I want the council to think bigger. Sure, Harrell has the opportunity for ground-breaking municipal policy on drones. Let's consider pole-mounted surveillance as well.

Forget about police drones. City Council should:

  • Forbid government staff use of any remotely-operated or autonomous recording device without warrant

  • Restrict government use of facial recognition technology and other biometric identification on any device to confirming the identity of the target of a warrant

  • Forbid government staff from equipping any remotely-operated or autonomous device with weapons

  • Forbid government staff from conducting general surveillance of the public with any device

36
@35 So no more dashboard cameras? That's definitely going to help accountability.

Aaron Dixon spoke here on Monday -- he was the captain of the Black Panther Party here in Seattle in the 60s. The Panthers were well-known for their sous-veillance tactics, the open observation of police. Who says drones aren't a protection of public space against the arbitrary exercise of police power? We can be concerned about the proliferation of surveillance devices without hysterics.
37
South Seattle is an exigent circumstance - a few actual strikes down there wouldn't hurt anything either.
38
@36: Dashboard cameras are neither autonomous nor remotely-operated.
39
As long as they aren't flying drones into my house, I'm not that worried about them. If they're used in public places, who cares? Don't do things in public that you want to keep private. If you carry a mobile phone, you're putting out more information about yourself and location than a drone could collect. What kind of data do you fear that a RC model helicopter with a camera can collect on you as you walk down a city street (Where you're probably on a camera anyway)?
40
@39: There's a big difference between walking down the street, saying something that I know my friend or neighbor will hear, and making a permanent government record of what I said and where I went. Just because I do something publicly doesn't mean my government should record and stockpile that information about me.
41
Comparing police drones to helicopters is like comparing city-wide CCTV to a reporter with a camcorder.
42
First - The city council needs to address the fact that it has a rogue police department.

UW Grants and Contract Services has a long standing history of handling such situations where a grant application is tendered without pre-approval by the university. All grant applications must go through a process where they obtain sign-offs from all the lateral agencies affected and then the line of those above the party initiating the proposal before any transaction happens. For instance, if someone in the Department of Surgery wants to accept a proposal for a contract from a pharmaceutical company or apply for a grant with the FDA, both require that all aspects, including budget and all costs to the UW that will be incurred, are provided and defended. Letters or forms of support from other UW parties that may be affected or have some association with the proposed work must be provided with sign-offs from those department heads. Then the entire line up in the hierarchy all the way to the dean of the School of Medicine must sign off.

In the case of the City Seattle and this drone issue, the SPD would not have been able to "Do it and apologize later". Instead the city council could have saved everyone a lot of grief by both reviewing the contract and scanning the proposal for online perusal by the public.

I suggest we do not jump to considering ordinances any further. I propose the city nullifies the contract since the SPD did not have the authority to 'sign' for the City of Seattle.
43
40, Anything private you say or do in a public setting, you are relinquishing control over that information. You don't get to dictate how others use data you freely made public.
44
@43: Rob: We, collectively, get to dictate *everything* our government does with data everyone freely made public. I want them to ignore that information unless they have a specific reason to record it.
45
44, Keep telling yourself that. You don't have a constitutional right to privacy if you voluntarily made your information public. If you post a naked picture of yourself online to a publicly available site, you don't get to dictate what happens to it. If the government decides to track and store publicly posted nude shots, there's nothing you can do about it. Tabloids can freely photograph and videotape celebrities in the street. There's no legal expectation of privacy in public places.
46
@45: I don't expect parabolic microphones listening to my quasi-private conversations conducted in public, quietly, yards away from anyone else, and you don't expect a camera to be looking up your skirt. It's reasonable to demand that our government not use robots to track and record what we say and where we go whenever we step out of our homes.
47
45,You already have been recorded in public places. You will continue to be recorded in public places. If you put on clothes, you are stating that you don't want to be seen naked in public. The space under your clothes is a legally private area. If have a conversation in a public space anyone can legally buy extended listening device, listen in. They even sell them in toy stores. For under $500 anyone can legally buy a fairly sophisticated consumer grade drone that could record you as legally a person could follow you with a hand held camera in a public setting. You can't demand that someone destroy a video of a kid's birthday party in a park because you wandered in the frame, and that camera owner can do whatever he or she wants with the video.
48
@43 how is the 24th floor of an apartment building that the pervy drone looked into a "public setting"?

Cause drones can do that. And there are optical window mikes that use the reflected sound waves off of windows to pick up audio of you doing it inside your bedroom with closed doors, through the balcony window.

Or at least there were during the 1980s when we used them.
49
Letting the ACLU use drones to monitor police... there's potential in that idea.
50
48, I didn't say recording people in their homes was legal without a warrant. In fact, I said that I'd have a problem with that. I repeatedly stated "public spaces".
53
@47: Rob: You're making straw man arguments. I'm not suggesting that we restrict the ability of the public to record in public. I'm suggesting that we demand that our government not use unmanned or remotely-controlled robotic devices to perform general surveillance of the things we say and places we go when outside the privacy of our homes. The fact that one does something in public is not justification for our government to make a permanent record of that action.
56
53,Virtually all video surveillance cameras are remotely operated. You are already recorded everyday you leave your house by cameras that are controlled by people in other locations. They might be miles away, and can move the camera zoom in on you.
57
I think I'm understanding the logic here. Camera in patrol car that catches cop doing something bad in public = okay. Camera in patrol car or on helicopter or on drone that catches bad guy doing something bad in public = unconscionable intrusion of privacy. Got it.
58
@53 - I take it you have been demanding that WA DOT remove all traffic cameras, then? After all, they're making a permanent record of what we do in public.
59
@57: Bax: Network of cameras in public creating government database with records where everyone has been when going about his or her almost-entirely-lawful and occasionally-unlawful business = surveillance state

@56: Rob: It seems that you didn't understand @53.
60
59, I understood just fine. Your point is silly. You are already being recorded by unmanned, remotely operated cameras.
61
@58: See also: "WSDOT answer questions about privacy and records of SR 520 bridge crossings". Please note that WSDOT staff do not have the history of expression of disdain for civil liberties that SPD staff do.
62
I'm as skeptical of police power as anyone; it's something we need to be wary of. What frustrated me in this conversation is the hysterics, the tinfoil-hat tenor of the discourse. We need accountability in our police departments, but even ten drones in the hands of city police doesn't make a police state. Further, there are obvious public benefits available: cheaper surveillance of known offenders, creating video records of police encounters, reducing fatalities from high speed chases. I heartily endorse the Council's efforts to create some kind of framework for their use. I just don't want the conversation to be dominated by the sort of people that try to make you watch Zeitgeist.
63
@62, Chaseacross wrote, "even ten drones in the hands of city police doesn't make a police state"

That's another straw man. I, along with, I suspect, a majority of the people offering calm, rational, thoughtful resistance to this program, am not concerned much about today's $40,000 drones that run for ten minutes on a charge, but about the $1000 drones we're bound to see in a few years. That's not tinfoil-hattery, it's technological and economic reality. Consider the falling cost, shrinking size, and increasing capabilities of CPUs, RAM, and batteries. If we don't address the relevant issues now, we're going to be scrambling to deal with a potential fleet of drones that fit neatly in SPD's budget without them needing to sneak around and secure US Department of Homeland Security grants or funnel the money through the innocent-sounding but paramilitary-gear-funding Seattle Police Foundation.

You know what is tinfoil-hat-class hysteria? The idea that there are crazed mass-murderers lurking around every corner just waiting to blow us all to smithereens the moment we're outside the watchful eye of surveillance cameras. I refuse to be terrorized by the United States government and its corporate partners, by way of our local peace officers's Special Operations Unit or otherwise.

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