iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Drone Program Aims To 'Accelerate' Use Of Unmanned Aircraft By Police

Posted: Updated: 05/22/2012 5:39 pm

WASHINGTON -- The Department of Homeland Security has launched a program to "facilitate and accelerate the adoption" of small, unmanned drones by police and other public safety agencies, an effort that an agency official admitted faces "a very big hurdle having to do with privacy."

The $4 million Air-based Technologies Program, which will test and evaluate small, unmanned aircraft systems, is designed to be a "middleman" between drone manufacturers and first-responder agencies "before they jump into the pool," said John Appleby, a manager in the DHS Science and Technology Directorate's division of borders and maritime security.

Appleby provided program details to a friendly audience at the Counter Terror Expo here last week. Just days before, the Federal Aviation Administration had issued new rules to streamline licensing for government agencies seeking to operate lightweight drones.

The DHS program "is meant to aid the user community in making informed decisions" about buying drones, said a DHS spokeswoman. She said the department can help law enforcement agencies "better understand what this technology can contribute in areas such as real-time law enforcement operational support; special event response; crime scene situational awareness; border security; fire/wildfire detection; and disaster evaluation and initial response."

Appleby said he hopes to invite vendors to participate in field tests of sensors and other drone capabilities at a military base somewhere in the Southwest this summer. Later this year, the FAA plans separate tests that will focus on how to safely and efficiently integrate unmanned aircraft into the same airspace with piloted airplanes.

It may be a few years before these automated eyes fill the sky, but privacy advocates, lawmakers and civil liberties groups are already worried about potential abuses.

"If DHS is going to serve as a Consumer Reports for local authorities that are interested in buying drones and help them figure out which drones perform well and appropriate for their needs, that's great," said Jay Stanley of the American Civil Liberties Union. "At the same time, we do know that DHS institutionally has had a role in pushing local governments to increase their surveillance through grants. I would hope they would not use this program to encourage unnecessary surveillance."

Most people likely wouldn't consider the use of unmanned aircraft to find missing children, locate lost hikers or detect forest fires as "unnecessary" surveillance. But given that fewer than 400 of the nation's 18,000 law enforcement agencies currently have aviation units, the FAA has chosen a go-slow approach with a focus on safety. Initially, law enforcement agencies will be just licensed for training and performance evaluation. Only when a department has shown that it is proficient will it be granted an operational license.

Patrick Egan, a Sacramento, Calif., consultant who heads the Silicon Valley chapter of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International, an industry trade group, said the DHS program has merit. "Somebody needs to do it," he said. "There's too much room for problems. If they don’t educate police departments, there will be a backlash to this technology."

Indeed, an ACLU report released this past December said, "Our privacy laws are not strong enough to ensure that the new technology will be used responsibly and consistently with democratic values." It warned of a coming "'surveillance society' in which our every move is monitored, tracked, recorded, and scrutinized by the authorities."

A preview of that came in 2007 when Houston police not so secretly tested an unmanned aircraft that the department hoped to use, among other functions, in issuing speeding tickets. More recently, a police SWAT team in Grand Forks, N.D., deployed a borrowed DHS Predator drone to assist in making the first arrest of an American using pilot-less airborne surveillance.

The FAA has already authorized police in a handful of cities -- including Seattle; Arlington, Texas; North Little Rock, Ark.; Gadsden, Ala.; and Ogden, Utah -- to fly drones. But with those numbers set to soar, at least two pundits have suggested an individual who shot down a surveillance drone would become a "hero" to some.

Once "the bottleneck has passed and every police department does indeed have eyes everywhere, our notions of privacy under the Fourth Amendment and reasonable searches … will need to be reevaluated," wrote University of North Dakota aviation law professor Joseph Vacek in a 2010 law review article, "Big Brother Will Soon Be Watching--Or Will He?" "It seems the state will have the power, both constitutionally and technologically, to continually monitor its citizens from above."

The FAA rules allow government agencies to operate drones weighing from a few ounces to 25 pounds, small enough to fit in a backpack or the trunk of a police cruiser. Because most drones cannot detect and avoid other aircraft themselves, for now they must fly no more than 400 feet off the ground and within sight of the operator. Currently, only U.S. Customs and Border Patrol will be operating the big Predators, stationed along the country's southern and northern borders.

Nonetheless, Amie Stepanovich of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, an advocacy group, pointed out that small, unmanned aircraft are "more maneuverable and quieter than" helicopters and piloted aircraft, and are capable of carrying gigapixel cameras, infrared and thermal imaging technology, automated license plate readers and, soon, facial recognition technology. And some drones have cameras able "to track 65 separate targets over a large radius," she said.

While DHS may be "easing the burden" on police departments with its new program, it is "not providing these agencies with best practices to protect privacy and civil liberties, nor is the agency mandating transparency or accountability in the operation of the drones that it funds" through a separate program, Stepanovich said. "This means that those affected by the proliferation of drones in their communities have no method to discover what drones have been licensed in their area, to whom, or how they are being used."

Such criticisms were very much on Appleby's mind when he spoke about the program at the Counter Terror Expo. The DHS official said government must explain the costs and benefits of the new technology in order to win over a skeptical public already annoyed by increasingly ubiquitous surveillance cameras.

"We have a very tall challenge to change public perception. Otherwise, we'll be stopped cold in our tracks if we don't do this thoughtfully," he said. "We have to bring the public along every step of the way" and convince them "we will not be watching backyards."

Yet even as he acknowledged critics, Appleby beamed over a recently tested wide-area surveillance system that would allow federal border agents to see the entire city of Nogales, Ariz., down to the street level. He called such sensors the "kinds of tools that could be game changers" in dealing with violence along the border.

That sort of persistent ongoing surveillance concerns Egan, the industry consultant. He said defense contractors, faced with a shrinking military market, are lobbying hard to provide "counterinsurgency applications" to local police in order to keep sales up. The question remains whether the DHS test program will prove little more than an enabler.

"Police departments are going to make a big mistake. I don't think the American public is ready for what I call the 'Taliban treatment,'" Egan said. "This is still America."

Related on HuffPost:

FOLLOW POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
WASHINGTON -- The Department of Homeland Security has launched a program to "facilitate and accelerate the adoption" of small, unmanned drones by police and other public safety agencies, an effort tha...
WASHINGTON -- The Department of Homeland Security has launched a program to "facilitate and accelerate the adoption" of small, unmanned drones by police and other public safety agencies, an effort tha...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 591
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Highlights
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (21 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
redhand32
08:45 AM on 07/22/2012
Of course the right wing nuts, Tea Baggers, and other assorted "yes" men angry white guys have no problem with this because fascism "makes us safer."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OldCowboy
Against stupidity the Gods contend in vain.
01:36 PM on 05/30/2012
Various ammunition manufacturers currently have shotgun shells and chokes which are specifically designed to take certain game. There are goose shells, coyote shells, turkey shells, etc. How long before someone makes a drone shell?
photo
geneandeddie59
Internationally unknown
11:22 AM on 05/30/2012
Some Texans are preparing to shoot down these drones... they might as well shoot themselves in the foot if they bring down the ones patrolling the border with Mexico!
09:22 AM on 05/25/2012
TERMINATOR, BLADE RUNNER COMING TO YOU COMMUNITY SOON! IT NOT SCIENCE FICTION ANY LONGER!! Brought to you by your Government, who can't seem to Feed, Educate or keep there Population Healthy??? Is there something I am missing in this reality??
07:29 PM on 05/24/2012
If you want to sell this idea to americans, you need to show them how much fun it will be to have drones. I'm in favor of every family having their own drone. Why not two? And don't forget the kids! Let's fill the air with these things! I was getting bored with cable and broadcast tv; now I can spy on my neighbors. If I get bored, I can even start a drone fight with my neighbor's drone. Think of the carnage! Nothing could be more american than that!
09:16 AM on 05/24/2012
I'm so glad that human life is finite.
photo
dhinds
A Collection of Quotable Gems
05:22 PM on 05/30/2012
So is the human race.
11:27 AM on 05/31/2012
True. But - barring a huge astroid impact - people will still be in existence to witness the dreadful future, rapidly approaching, of high-tech man's inhumanity to man.

Glad I won't be one of 'em!
09:09 AM on 05/24/2012
Maybe its time for the American citizenry to "faciliatate and accelerate" our use of heat-seeking missiles.

Seriously, our only hope is through political activism to defund these Big Brother efforts toward totalitarian authority. They are, after all, using our own tax dollars - and billions of them - to fund all their programs & technology designed to spy on us. We are being made to pay through the nose to surrender our own individual privacy.
09:03 AM on 05/24/2012
Sounds like a new form of hunting. Who needs skeet shooting. Just like on Harry's Law!
08:46 AM on 05/24/2012
Times have changed and we need to change too. They can follow me and other law abiding citizens all they want because law abiding citizens have nothing to fear. Following us will bore the heck out of them. On the other hand, it may well keep us safer from criminals and terrorists. We need to stay a step ahead of those who wish to harm us.
02:17 PM on 05/24/2012
so you are for sacrificing freedom for safety? Then you deserve neither.
04:47 PM on 05/24/2012
In 1787, a policeman was entitled to arrest based on what he could see in plain sight through a window, When you get down to it, what's the difference? Also, only a fool would sacrifice safety for any form of government. Food, shelter, safety are much more important than your form of government. Consider Poland -- for years they lived under Leftist totalitarianism. The Berlin Wall falls, the Poland is rapidly headed for degeneracy. And how are freedom or safety involved in these UAVs? Unless they supply missiles with the drones, they aren't a safety issue. And what aren't you not free to do? You remain free to commit crimes, for that matter. Just more likely to get caught.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:42 PM on 05/24/2012
"law abiding citizens have nothing to fear"

Law abiding citizens have to fear the criminals in government.
11:01 PM on 05/24/2012
Just the current administration.
08:33 AM on 05/24/2012
I was a cop on a major police dept for 28 years and I can tell you this is WRONG! The idea is noble but the govt has alterior motives for its use. Our constitutional rights are slowly being eroded. They say its under the pretext of criminal monitoring but trust me, they will expand on this and evetually it will be turned into big brother.
08:51 PM on 05/24/2012
Slowly? What slowly? Under the constitution, the Government has the power to coin money. Not print, because the Colonies had been swamped with worthless fiat currency since the Massachussetts Bay Colony printed the very first funny money in history (in 1690 -- yep, those holy-moly prottie b*st*rds!, to finance the Colony's official piracy program). Last year Pres O'bwana exercized his Recess Appointment power to appoint some commie *ssholes. Except Congress was not in recess. O'bwana-Care is 100% un-Constitutional, as doctor/patient medical practice cannot be interstate commerce, by definition. All of O'bwana's czars are likewise un-Constitutional. The ultimate loss of rights was the Seccession of the Southern States in 1861. The Constitution was created by the States. What creature is superior to it's creator? Reconstruction was much worse than anything (even drones) even the tin-hat guys are worrying about today. Not only was it totalitarian, but it institutionalized a race war -- with the US Government on the side of non-whites. How serious do you guess it must have been to make the victims' great, great, great, great grandkids mad as hell to this day?
02:32 AM on 05/24/2012
Legal surveiilance & searches are preceded by probable cause, not vice versa. Anything less, seems a clear violation of the Constitutional prohibition of illegal searches & seizures.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:30 AM on 05/24/2012
http://funny-videos.eu/wp-content/image/img_25358_funny-drone-dengue-youtube-flv.jpg

Neighborhood friendly drone so as not to scare the children!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ladyrosedeky
10:51 PM on 05/23/2012
I'm an advocate for automatic cameras at stop lights to take pics of those running red lights and issuing tickets butthis is a whole new ball game.

After the Republican governors from southern border states begging to get these drones for .their borders (Anyone remember Perry during the debates?) now Obama is going to be the bad guy.

There are some extreme situations where I can see the use of the smaller drones

Strategic response unit has been called to a hostage situation. While you are trying to get your people in, you can use the drone to fly over and assess the situation and be able to view from above and help guide them around the area to keep them from running into any unforseen problems, hopefully. Especially if it is equipped w/thermal imaging.

The point about looking for a lost child or person, especially in a forested area.

National forest where, unfortunately, criminals are booby trapping them to protect their pot fields.

Being able to monitor activity at our shipping ports 24/7 w/thermal imaging. Now this is the place I'd want it used. The other place I'd want it used is our refineries; power and water plants.

But then, we want our privacy protected.

Remember, if you carry a cell phone - you are already being tracked.

Technology has outpaced our constitutional rights and our legislators need to get off their duffs and catch up.
11:45 PM on 05/23/2012
In response to your last sentence............GOOD luck with that !!!!!!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:04 AM on 05/24/2012
technology has outpaced our Constitutional rights? go to bed a shole and count sheep
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:43 PM on 05/23/2012
oops sorry, posted my comment in the wrong window/page; but you'll probably like the map reference anyway! :-)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:35 PM on 05/23/2012
Here's a good sequence of ME civilization timeline maps from 3500 BC-2005AD. Maps are dynamic (hover over locations [red markers] for summary detail and detailed view of each locale). The link to the next time period is at the bottom of the civilization description.

http://www.timemaps.com/history/middle-east-3500bc#time96_3500BC