Border Patrol Drones
Slammed By Advocates Calling For Privacy Protections
Matt Sledge
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/24/border-patrol-drones_n_3150227.html
U.S. Customs and Border Protection drones are a wasteful
giveaway to defense contractors and a threat to civil liberties, a report released Wednesday by the Center for
International Policy found. The report came the same day an advocacy
organization called on the Federal Aviation Administration to strengthen drone
privacy protections.
The report's findings are of particular interest now, with
Congress considering whether to increase funding for border drones as
part of a comprehensive immigration reform package. Customs and Border
Protection's drone fleet currently includes seven Predators and three
Guardians. Under a $443.1 million contract the agency issued in 2012, it may
gain 14 more drones in three years.
Tom Barry, lead author of the report, said it
found "an inefficient, costly and absurd approach to border security and
homeland security through the purchasing of Predator drones that were designed
for military activity."
Despite the hundreds of millions spent by the agency for
domestic drones, by Customs and Border Protection calculations, the
weapons have played a supporting role in only 0.003 percent of drug seizures
and 0.001 percent of illegal border crossing detentions.
Given those low numbers, Barry said, Customs
and Border Protection has now switched to a new justification for its drone
fleet: law enforcement and national security. The agency is promising to work
with the Department of Defense or local law enforcement agencies. That, Barry
argued, should be cause for concern.
"I think we should be afraid, in terms of
this breaking down of the distinction between domestic law enforcement and
national security and foreign affairs," Barry said. "That line has
been criss-crossed many times with DHS."
Customs and Border Protection did not respond
to a request for comment.
Separately on Wednesday, the Electronic Frontier Foundation submitted
comments to the Federal Aviation Administration calling for
stricter privacy requirements on domestic drones owned privately or by local
governments. The agency will select six test sites for domestic dronesby the
end of the year, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation would like it to be
clear about surveillance capabilities the unmanned aircraft possess.
Jennifer Lynch, an Electronic Frontier
Foundation staff attorney, said the FAA should impose privacy protections on
both government and private drone operators.
"When it comes to drones, the FAA needs
to examine privacy issues with the same rigor it applies to flight and
mechanical safety," Lynch said in a statement. "Just as vague safety
regulations for drones could result in damage to life or property, vague
privacy measures could harm civil liberties."
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