DHS
drones equipped to eavesdrop on Americans
The US Department of Homeland Security already has an arsenal of drones to be deployed for whatever the agency deems fit, but the actual capabilities of those vehicles exceed what many Americans may expect.
RT,
5
March, 2013
The
unmanned drones being used inside of the United States right now
can’t shoot Hellfire missiles like their overseas counterparts.
They can, however, conduct surveillance, intercept communications and
even determine whether or not a person thousands of feet below the
aircraft is armed.
The
latest revelation comes courtesy of a DHS document that was recently
obtained by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, or EPIC,
through a Freedom of Information Act request. After analyzing a
partially-redacted drone “performance specification” file
received through their FOIA plea, EPIC said that records indicate
“the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection is operating drones in
the United States capable of intercepting electronic communications.”
Of
the ten Predator B drones currently maintained by the agency, EPIC
adds that the document confirms that those aircraft “have the
capacity to recognize and identify a person on the ground.”
“The
records obtained by EPIC raise questions about the agency's
compliance with federal privacy laws and the scope of domestic
surveillance,” the center writes on their website this week.
Speaking
to CNet, EPIC’s Open Government Project director, Ginger McCall,
says the discovery shows just how dangerous drones could be to the
privacy of the millions of Americans who could have drones overhead
right this moment.
"The
documents clearly evidence that the Department of Homeland Security
is developing drones with signals interception technology and the
capability to identify people on the ground," McCall says. "This
allows for invasive surveillance, including potential communications
surveillance, that could run afoul of federal privacy laws."
Since
EPIC published their FOID’d documents last week, Cnet has managed
to scrounge up an unredacted copy that outlines what the DHS was
looking for in drones when the report was written in 2010.
Specifically, the performance specifications note that while the DHS
is not implementing drones for eavesdropping on America right now,
“Further tasks, such as communication relay and interception,
although not yet evaluated in the field, are assessed to also be best
performed” by the unmanned aerial vehicles.
Additionally,
DHS drones must “be capable of identifying a standing human being
at night as likely armed or not” and “be capable of marking a
target into a retrievable database.” No information is given as to
what database that refers to, but a Homeland Security official
speaking on condition of anonymity tells DHS that the drones lack —
for now, at least — the ability to read a subject’s face to find
out who they are.
“The
drones are able to identify whether movement on the ground comes from
a human or an animal, but that they do not perform facial
recognition,” Cnet reporter Declan McCullagh says the DHS source’s
claims.
"Any
potential deployment of such technology in the future would be
implemented in full consideration of civil rights, civil liberties,
and privacy interests and in a manner consistent with the law and
long standing law enforcement practices,” the source adds.
The
Homeland Security department’s drones are currently used to allow
federal officials to monitor any criminal activity on America’s
borders to the north and south. As RT reported recently, however, a
2012 Supreme Court ruling determined that the government can conduct
border patrol operations within 100 miles of an international
crossing. By that logic, the approximately 200 million Americans
residing within that parameter are subject to Border Patrol searches
and, perhaps soon enough, surveillance drones.
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