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Lawmakers Demanding More Surveillance Across the Country

Following the tragic and deadly terrorist bombings in Boston, lawmakers across the country are demanding more surveillance in our major cities.  In an article posted by Keith Proctor on CNN Money, he talks about how citizens and lawmakers alike value their own personal safety over privacy, but, “…when  you see someone maimed by bomb shrapnel, privacy concerns sound coldly abstract.”

Homeland Security, on the other hand, have drastically been cutting down on state grants that would enable more surveillance equipment to go up.  Due to this, companies like Lockheed Martin are doing more with less by drastically improving surveillance technology, creating the “video analytic” system, which analyzes surveillance footage entirely by using artifical intelligence.



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Surveillance Cameras in Huntington Beach, California

The City of Huntington Beach, reports the Orange County Register, is looking into getting video surveillance cameras installed in the downtown area. As the number of crimes rise, and the number of police drop, some city officials are asking for video cameras.

Earlier this month officials asked city workers to look into the different costs and details of putting up cameras in downtown HB, with a goal to reduce crimes and to help police in ongoing investigations.

Huntington Beach, a tourist attraction that has a lot of alcohol related assaults, thefts, and of course – there’s public intoxication.

The only councilman opposed to putting video surveillance cameras in the downtown area is Matthew Harper, who issued the statement, “When the government is coming in and placing cameras all about a public area, that’s a Big Brother world that I’m not interested in being a part of.”

Police Sergent Jim Katapodi said that in his experience, camera’s deter crime, and those who aren’t performing criminal acts, have nothing to worry about. I’ve heard that comment a great deal lately, and I don’t like it.

Some worry about the effects cameras might have on Tourism, but looking at a city like London, for example, one might assume that their high level of public surveillance doesn’t affect travelers much. That is unless they are travelling for the wrong reasons.

Cities all around the US are dealing with this exact situation. Police budgets are dropping, their forces are shrinking, and video surveillance technology is a relatively cheap way to slow crime and reduce budgets. That said, there are a great amount of individuals who believe that government recording of the public is a breach of privacy, and needs to be outlawed. It will be interesting to learn what the courts decide in major cases moving forward. As of now, they seem to be letting public surveillance prevail.



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Business Allows Police to Access Security Cameras

ABC News recently published an article about the increasing amount of crimes caught on private surveillance cameras, and police interest in connecting to these cameras. In Philadelphia and Washington DC (as well as other states), police are putting together maps of private surveillance cameras. This allows them to quickly search for video evidence at businesses close to where a crime took place.

This is a great opportunity for police departments in any state. If they are relying on private cameras, at least the police won’t have to pay upkeep costs for those devices. The only cost is the cost of retrieving footage from private security cameras, and the cost for investigating the evidence.

However, there are fourth amendment rights at risk here. The news has been full of cases involving audio and video evidence – it’s a topic of discussion that varies by state, because a/v recording laws can be so different. One side of the argument says our privacy is being violated, the other says it’s okay to record if there’s a chance to increase security. What are your thoughts?


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