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Austin
police chief proposes "Big Brother" camera system
By
Thom White
AUSTIN January 23, 2008 - On Tuesday, recently-appointed
Austin
police chief Art Acevedo announced to the media a proposed police
surveillance camera system that would attempt to record all public
activity in the Sixth Street district in order to reduce the likelihood
of crime. The cameras' recordings would be reviewed in secret by
police personnel who would use the footage as evidence in prosecutions
against individuals they identify committing crimes on video.
Chief Acevedo said if there is no public opposition
to the installation of the public spy cameras, the equipment will
be installed and begin recording around 6th Street in a few months.
According to news reports, Chief Acevedo told reporters,
"As I travel around the city, I have been approached by residents
in high-crime areas who are not only asking, but who are really
starting to demand the use of technology." Acevedo said. "People
in this community want us to do everything we can to keep them safe.
This is one of those strategies."
According to KEYE-TV, Chief Acevedo said, "This
is to put people on notice: criminals, the community, and the cops
-- that, yes... You're in an area to be surveilled that's out in
the open. So, guess what? Before you start fighting with somebody,
before you start stabbing somebody, before you start trying to victimize
somebody, your action may be caught on tape, and you may be prosecuted
and convicted, because we'll have the best evidence."
Sixth
Street -- a police surveillance zone?
Austin responds to Chief Acevedo's plan.
COMMENTARY:
Video surveillance for the people
Sixth Street is only one of four "high-crime"
areas in which Chief Acevedo plans to install "Big Brother"-style
surveillance cameras. Other targets include the intersection of
North Lamar and Rundberg; 12th Street and Chicon in East Austin;
and along Montopolis Blvd. on the Southeast side of town. The particular
neighborhoods have ostensibly been chosen because they have "high
crime rates."
Chief Acevedo believes he can get "federal
funds" to pay surveillance equipment manufacturers and installers,
and for maintenance of the system. It is likely these monies would
be allocated from the Department of Homeland Security as an "anti-terrorism"
measure. The Statesman raised questions over some important details
yet to be arranged in the Chief's camera proposal. Tony Plohetski
reported (1/24/08):
[Chief Acevedo] said he plans to explore ways
to pay for the project - possibly through federal grants -- and
work out logistics such as who would monitor the camera footage.
Acevedo said one option could be to hire retired officers to watch
the videos 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and call officers
on the street if they see a crime in progress.
Other details, such as where the cameras would
be positioned and how long the footage would be preserved, need
to be worked out, he said.
The installation of police surveillance cameras
in Austin's well-known 6th Street music district is apparently being
spearheaded by a group of business owners who form the Downtown
Austin Alliance (DAA). In August last year, DAA leaders visited
Dallas to a see a 40-camera police surveillance system instituted
there a few months before. The Austin American-Statesman reported
(1/24/08):
Austin police and representatives from downtown
business associations last year began discussing the possibility
of adding cameras along Sixth Street and traveled to Dallas to study
its system, which officials added in January 2007. Bill Brice, program
director for security and maintenance for the Downtown Austin Alliance,
said the visit intensified his group's support for the cameras.
The alliance is also considering whether to help pay for the Sixth
Street camera system, he said.
Dallas police received a local grant to pay for
their $850,000 system of 40 cameras, which are on utility poles
or stoplights across downtown, including areas around the Dallas
Convention Center and in the West End historical district. Police
officials said each camera cost about $800.
In an interview with KEYE-TV, Bill Brice added that,
"We really see this as an opportunity that might help APD keep
Downtown [Austin] one of the safest cities in the country."
According to local news stories, ACLU
spokeswoman Debbie Russell is the only person publicly questioning
the move toward the police surveillance plan. Ms. Russell told the
Daily Texan (1/24/08), "Public cameras will inevitably capture
embarrassing, but not necessarily illegal, activity on Sixth Street.
Once that video exists, it can live forever online. It could hurt
Austin's downtown entertainment economy. Public surveillance cameras
may sound like a good idea, but research has shown they don't stop
people from committing crimes."
She told KLBJ (1/24/08): "Studies have shown
that, in fact, surveillance cameras have not decreased crime
In London, they are the most surveilled city in the world. Many
studies have shown [the cameras] are, in fact, not effective."
However, Ms. Russell is not completely opposed to
putting police cameras in on Sixth Street. According to the Statesman,
"she would urge the department to use the cameras on Sixth
Street for six months as a pilot program before committing to a
citywide project."
APD public information manager Ana Sabana told CITIZINE
that the plan to install spy cameras is not yet written in stone
yet, and that, more than anything, the chief is merely "floating"
the idea to see what people think about the pros and cons of a Big
Brother police surveillance system.
An APD spokesman, Detective James Mason, told the
Daily Texan (1/24/08), "It's not anything concrete
TxDOT
already has cameras up. We may look at getting in on their cameras,
where they could be recorded or monitored by an officer or retired
officer. There are just a lot of ideas out there on how it would
be funded." He then said the "police will give the public
the final say on the cameras."
"If they want them, then we will put them in
place," Mason said. "But [Police Chief Acevedo] has been
meeting with several communities in the downtown, Rundberg and Montopolis
areas, and they're all for it."
Sixth
Street -- a police surveillance zone?
Austin responds to Chief Acevedo's plan.
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MODEST PROPOSAL
Video surveillance for the people
By Roggie McFadden
Certain residents have suggested a more democratic
use of this new video surveillance technology. One caller to the
KLBJ-AM
morning show suggested that video feeds from cameras mounted
on APD cruisers be streamed live over the internet so that citizens
could be certain that all police actions are lawful. Radio personality
Sgt. Sam Cox opposed the plan to make video footage from police
cruisers available to the public because the APD runs a lot of "covert"
operations, and this could tip off the bad guys.
Others have commented that all conversations in
the office of Chief Acevedo (and other responsible police officials)
should be recorded and posted on the internet so that citizens could
review the public servants' statements and make sure everything
is on the "up and up." This video surveillance in public
offices would give the public a clearer picture into the decision-making
process and could help restore the public trust. Besides, if you're
not doing anything wrong, what've you got to hide?
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