What
the f.... do the NZ police need drones for?!
Police
mull 'eyes in the sky'
New
Zealand police are investigating whether to use unmanned aerial
vehicles, which would act as spies in the sky.
30
August, 2012
New
Zealand police are investigating whether to use unmanned aerial
vehicles, which would act as spies in the sky.
The
vehicles are often small and could be used to take video footage and
photos from the air. They are discreet because of their size and have
been labelled as "eyes in the sky".
Police
in the United States have been given consent to use the airborne
drones, while police in the United Kingdom say they see the unmanned
cameras "as part of our future".
New
Zealand police say they may also be part of ours.
National
Crime Manager Detective Superintendent Rod Drew said police were
currently evaluating the use of the vehicles.
A
decision would be made in about six months.
New
Zealand police have used the drones only once, to canvass the area
where the body of Wellington woman Sofia Athanassiou was found in
July.
Police
used a drone from a commercial company to search Mt Victoria in that
case, a spokesman said.
While
the machines have been seen as a crime-fighting tool, there are
concerns about their pervasive nature.
Drew
told TV3 News that New Zealand police were too busy to be monitoring
the general public from the sky.
"We
don't have the time to go spy on people for no good reason," he
said.
United
States police chiefs adopted a code of conduct on the use of the
drones earlier this month, the Washington Post reported.
They
agreed to let any captured images be open to the public and not to
store any images that weren't believed to be evidence of a crime or
part of an ongoing investigation.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.