Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
September 26, 2013
In another indication of how the TSA is expanding its turf way
beyond airport security, the federal agency is about to roll out high-tech
vehicles that will utilize secret technology to conduct “covert surveillance
operations” in cities around the country.
According to a synopsis posted on the Federal Business
Opportunities website (PDF),
the TSA is set to purchase technology to retrofit three vans in Arlington, VA,
Chicago, IL, and San Francisco, CA in order to convert them into surveillance
vehicles that will “conduct covert surveillance operations in the course of
investigations.”
Precisely where such covert surveillance will take place is not
mentioned, although in 2010 it was revealed that US government agencies were
already using roving street surveillance vans that deployed
backscatter x-ray vision technology to inspect other vehicles.
In 2011, the Electronic Privacy Information Center also revealed
plans for the Department of Homeland Security and the TSA to roll out
mobile surveillance vans that had long-distance X-ray capability and eye
movement tracking.
TSA Visible Intermodal Prevention and Response (VIPR) teams are responsible
for around 10,000 checkpoints every year in the US, and have expanded from
airports to bus & train terminals and even highways despite the fact that
there is “no proof that the roving viper teams have foiled any terrorist plots
or thwarted any major threat to public safety,” according
to the L.A. Times.
The total cost of outfitting just three vans with the covert
surveillance technology will be a jaw-dropping $160,000 dollars.
Despite their tax dollars paying for such equipment, American
citizens are not privy to any detailed information on what this surveillance
system will actually entail.
The TSA vehicles will be fitted with Crime Point IP Network
Surveillance technology. When attempting to access details of the technology via
the Crime
Point website, the user is met with the message, “Due to its sensitive
nature, the product content on this website is restricted to law enforcement
professionals and government agencies only,” and a password is required to go
any further.
Although the general public is barred from scrutinizing specific
details, the company says that it provides “covert outdoor video systems” that
“incorporate the latest emerging technologies.”
Crime Point provides surveillance vans of its own but, like
details of the surveillance systems, that information is also restricted.
The legality of the TSA conducting “covert surveillance” of
Americans, whether it be at transport hubs or on highways, conflicts with the
Fourth Amendment, which protects the “right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
seizures.”
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