RT
April 27, 2013
New York City police officials intend to expand the already extensive use of
surveillance cameras throughout town. The plan, unveiled Thursday, comes as part
of a drive for increased security around the US following the Boston Marathon
attack.
New York City Police Department Commissioner Ray Kelly announced the plan
during a press conference with Mayor Michael Bloomberg, in which the two
announced that the suspected Boston Marathon bombers were planning to attack New
York next. The pair said they hope to discourage criminals by using so-called
“smart cameras” that will aggregate data from 911 alerts, arrest
records, mapped crime patterns, surveillance cameras and radiation detectors,
among other tools, according to The Verge.
“You’re never going to know where all of our cameras are,” Bloomberg
told reporters gathered outside City Hall. “And that’s one of the ways you
deter people; they just don’t know whether the person sitting next to you is
somebody sitting there or a detective watching.”
Kelly said the Domain Awareness System, nicknamed “the dashboard,” would
centralize already existing data captured on the between 3,500 and 6,000 cameras
already placed throughout the city with new technology developed in conjunction
with Microsoft. The project is expected to take three years to complete and cost
between $40 and $50 million.
The commissioner previously said that at least 16 terror plots had been
thwarted in New York City since the attack on September 11, 2001, asserting that
such law enforcement success show that the surveillance tools put in place
since then have been effective. His boast came in the face of the New York Civil
Liberties Union and similar privacy advocates who have asked for more
transparency on the issue of police monitoring.
“The privacy issue has really been taken off the table,” Kelly said
Thursday. “I don’t think people are concerned about it. I think people
accept it in a post-9/11 world.”
Mayor Bloomberg agreed, using the press conference to slam the “special
interests” who have objected to his policies. The American Civil Liberties
Union, for one, has criticized Bloomberg’s administration for installing
thousands of cameras in Lower Manhattan in a surveillance initiative that has
since expanded north through Midtown.
“The role of surveillance cameras played in identifying the suspects was
absolutely essential to saving lives, both in Boston, and now we know here in
New York City,” the mayor said Thursday. “We’ve made major investments
in camera technology – notwithstanding the objections of some special
interests.”
“People are all worried about privacy,” he continued. “Yes, it
is a concern, but given the balance you have between keeping people safe and
total privacy, the direction the whole world is going is more cameras and
better-quality cameras.”
Saturday, April 27, 2013
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