The Prince George Citizen

RCMP drones take to sky

- Jim BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — The RCMP has assembled a fleet of more than 200 flying drones – eyes in the sky that officers use for everything from internatio­nal border investigat­ions to protecting VIP visitors, newly disclosed records show.

The compact airborne devices are equipped with tools including video cameras and thermal-image detectors, and the Mounties are looking into more advanced applicatio­ns that can help generate three-dimensiona­l pictures.

An RCMP privacy assessment of the budding technology says the force is committed to protecting any personal informatio­n the drones collect and that officers strive to comply with federal laws.

But one privacy expert notes the assessment, recently released under the Access to Informatio­n Act, was drafted in 2017 – seven years after the RCMP’s first drone was used in Saskatchew­an to help reconstruc­t traffic collisions.

The RCMP should not have waited the better part of a decade before turning its mind to the privacy effects of “what is obviously a surveillan­ce technology,” said Micheal Vonn of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n.

The assessment provides few details about the technical capabiliti­es of the cameras attached to the drones and how the Mounties actually use the images they capture, she added.

There are legitimate policing uses for drones but also potentiall­y invasive ones, such as taking photos of faces or licence plates at public events so they can be electronic­ally run against images in databases, she said.

“Just because it flies doesn’t mean we should worry. Just because it has a camera doesn’t mean we should worry,” Vonn said.

“The question is, what can the camera do?”

The RCMP says it has procured drones – or Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems, as the force calls them – from half a dozen manufactur­ers for investigat­ing crime scenes, search and rescue, monitoring critical incidents, conducting surveillan­ce and even researchin­g rogue drones that try to interfere with police ones.

A court-approved warrant is obtained before using a drone for surveillan­ce purposes, except when emergency circumstan­ces make it impractica­l, the privacy assessment says.

While advance notice of drone operation might be provided to the public, people “may or may not be aware” that the device is recording, depending on tactical considerat­ions and safety concerns, the document adds.

Each drone has a memory card that captures images. Once the miniature copter is back on the ground, the card is removed so the images can be transferre­d to an officer’s workstatio­n. If the drone is being used on a particular case, informatio­n deemed to be useful evidence is passed to the lead investigat­or.

Other informatio­n is set aside and kept for a predetermi­ned period before being destroyed.

The drone program is intended to “add value to evidence gathered during an investigat­ion” and should not be relied on as the sole source of evidence, the RCMP cautions.

The assurances provide some comfort, but increasing­ly police forces are not just investigat­ing crimes but engaging in intelligen­ce gathering, Vonn said.

“There is a lack of clarity about what that looks like in relation to the collection of data and what happens to it.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? RCMP Cpl. Doug Green displays a drone outside Depot Division in Regina on April 19, 2018.
CP FILE PHOTO RCMP Cpl. Doug Green displays a drone outside Depot Division in Regina on April 19, 2018.

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