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Balancing Public Safety and Privacy Rights in the Digital Age. Benjamin Feist, Legislative Director ACLU of Minnesota. Because Freedom Can’t Protect Itself. About the ACLU-MN.
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Balancing Public Safety and Privacy Rights in the Digital Age Benjamin Feist, Legislative Director ACLU of Minnesota Because Freedom Can’t Protect Itself
About the ACLU-MN • Nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting the civil liberties of all Minnesotans under the United States and Minnesota constitutions. • Promote our mission through litigation, public education and lobbying efforts • Affiliate of the national ACLU organization, which has over 500,000 members
About the ACLU-MN • Not opposed to the use of new technologies in policing, but safety should not come at the expense of civil liberties • Ally and resource on privacy issues • Example: Recent cell phone tracking bill in MN
New Technologies • Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPR) • Drone Surveillance • Police Body Cameras • Cellular Exploitation Devices
New Technologies • Powerful new tools allow law enforcement agents to monitor and record individuals’ movements in unprecedented way • Technology is becoming cheaper • Digital data is easier to store, access, and manipulate
Privacy Issues Overview • Most new technologies used at state and local level • Courts and legislatures have not been able to keep up with rapidly advancing technology • Data retention and classification issues • Public awareness and concern
Privacy Issues Overview • Feb. 2014: Minneapolis Star Tribune poll found that 63% of those surveyed were “somewhat” or “very concerned” about the amount of personal information that the State of Minnesota and law enforcement collect on individuals • http://www.startribune.com/politics/246050161.html.
Mosaic Theory of the 4th Amendment • Cumulative approach to the evaluation of data collection • Long-term surveillance on individuals provides a much richer picture than the discrete data points • More protective of privacy because obtaining and analyzing the full “mosaic” may constitute a Fourth Amendment search even if none of the individual “tiles” trigger constitutional scrutiny
Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPR) • Cameras mounted on patrol cars or stationary objects (telephone poles, underside of brides, etc…) • Take a photo of every license plate that passes by, digitizes them and checks plates against databases • Provides an alert to a patrol officer whenever a match or “hit” appears.
Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPR) • Can help police to recover stolen cars and arrest people with outstanding warrants • Also, routinely stores location information on a vast number of innocent people • Core principle that the government does not invade privacy and collect info on innocent activities just in case citizens do something wrong in the future
ALPR Controversy in Minnesota • August 2012 media reports on ALPR data retention and classification • Then-Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak’s car was recorded 41 times in the preceding year • Plate data was “public” under MN’s public records law • Now under “temporary classification” until August 2015
ALPR Legislation • Continuing divide between privacy advocates and law enforcement over retention period for “non-hit” data • ACLU-MN position: limited retention, judicial oversight • Other potential issues: • Sharing and selling of data • Classification of data (privacy vs. transparency) • Use as evidence
Drone Surveillance • Unmanned aerial systems (UAS), a/k/a unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), a/k/a “drones” • Used for scientific research and agriculture to military and law enforcement operations • Regulated by the FAA, but mounting pressure to expand use
Drone Surveillance • Who uses (or plans to use) drones? • Federal government • Some law enforcement • Aerial photography • Hobbyists • Commercial delivery (proposed) • University research • Other governmental entities
Drone Use by Law Enforcement • Unlike helicopters or other police vehicles because not subject to practical limitations of manned vehicles: • Helicopters are costly and require trained pilots, launch pad, and flight and ground crews • Rather, drones are cheap, small and quiet • Able to track precise movements • View evidence inside private areas
Drone Use by Law Enforcement • At least 14 states have already passed laws regulating domestic drone use • ACLU-MN position: • Warrant requirement for surveillance in private areas, with emergency exceptions • Data on bystanders should be deleted promptly • Government body approval before acquisition • Annual reporting on use
Police Body Cameras • Replacing dashboard cameras in many departments • Technology is getting cheaper • Can increase officer accountability and reduce “he said, she said” arguments
Police Body Cameras • Need policies on when the cameras are turned on and off • Privacy concerns: • Individual victims recorded • Potential to invade privacy in homes • Recordings may become public
Resources • ACLU National Reports: • You Are Being Tracked: How License Plate Readers Are Being Used to Record Americans’ Movements (July 2013), https://www.aclu.org/files/assets/071613-aclu-alprreport-opt-v05.pdf • Protecting Privacy from Aerial Surveillance: Recommendations for Government Use of Drone Aircraft (December 2011), http://www.aclu.org/files/assets/protectingprivacyfromaerialsurveillance.pdf
Because Freedom Can’t Protect Itself www.aclu-mn.org