« Interior has Lost Track of the Amount of Money Feds Owe to Native Americans |
Main
| Study: Omaha DNA Sweeps Don't Solve Crime »
Friday
Sep102004
Friday, September 10, 2004 at 01:42AM
Mayor Richard Daley on Thursday announced a major
expansion of the city's video surveillance system, adding 250 cameras
and tying more than 2,000 existing cameras used by the city, Chicago
Transit Authority, Chicago Housing Authority and other local
governmental agencies to the city's 911 center. Private-sector
companies also will be able to opt into the system, linking their
security devices to the center as well. "Cameras are the
equivalent of hundreds of sets of eyes," Mayor Richard Daley said
Thursday. Neither the courts nor the American Civil Liberties
Union have objected to cameras in public places, saying there is no
expectation of privacy on a city street. Ed Yohnka, a spokesman
for the American Civil Liberties Union cited a 2003 ACLU report that
concluded that a "dark potential" lurks in the national proliferation
of monitoring systems. "If we do not take steps to control and regulate
surveillance to bring it into conformity with our values, we will find
ourselves being tracked, analyzed, profiled and flagged in our daily
lives to a degree we can scarcely imagine today," it said. "We will be
forced to constantly ask of even the smallest action taken in public,
`Will this make me look suspicious? Will this hurt my chances for
future employment? Will this reduce my ability to get insurance?'"
Yohnka also questioned the effectiveness of cameras, saying they have
not reduced crime in London, where they have been used for years. [more ] and [more ]