Above Photo: From CreativeResistance.org. Turkish Confusion by Anthony Freda.
At right is a photo of a drone taken by Sue McAnanama at a July 14, 2016, march, in White Plains, N.Y.
Nick Mottern of knowdrones.com says, “I just spoke with White Plains Assistant Chief of Police Anne Fitzsimmons who declined to acknowledge whether or not the White Plains Police have a drone much less whether the police used a drone to undertake surveillance of people at the County-wide March for Justice held in White Plains last Thursday, July 14.
“Asked if the police had used a drone at the march, she said that she would not give any information having to do with ‘tactics’. No information will be provided, she said, because ‘we need to maintain the integrity of our ability to protect the public.’
“She said further that since there are ‘many, many cameras out there’ the question of the use of a drone is ‘a moot point’.”
It’s worth noting the meaningless and militaristic language this supposedly domestic civilian public servant uses to deny information to the public. Just label something a “tactic” and you can keep it secret, she thinks, so that the enemy doesn’t learn your tactics. But who is the enemy? And the “integrity” of serving the public requires not letting the public know what you are doing (and spying on that public)?
Mottern points out that, in fact, there are differences between drone cameras and other cameras that might film people attempting to exercise their First Amendment right to assemble and speak. “Drones are able to focus in on individuals and groups and to follow them for extended periods; drones can be fitted with pepper spray, tear gas and other anti-personnel weapons,” Mottern says. Yes, and they can be used to intimidate, to target political enemies, to restrict people’s rights. And if they really were no different from other means of surveillance, what sort of excuse would that be? Nobody excuses police killings on the grounds that there are lots of other killings anyway.
Syracuse, N.Y., was the fifth city in the country to join the list of those banning drones. Meanwhile White Plains just goes ahead with this new abuse without making any sort of public decision. “It seems quite extraordinary,” says Mottern, “that the White Plains Police feel that they can begin to use a highly intrusive tool of public surveillance and intimidation without informing the public and, moreover, without public debate and a vote by the White Plains City Council.”
Source Article from https://www.popularresistance.org/white-plains-ny-spies-on-residents-with-drone/
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