Baltimore Sun

Baltimore surveillan­ce contract challenged

ACLU sues over plan for planes to hunt evidence

- By Emily Opilo

The American Civil Liberties Union and its Maryland branch are suing the Baltimore Police Department over a controvers­ial plan to fly surveillan­ce planes over the city, the group announced Thursday.

The suit, filed Thursday in federal court, challenges the city’s surveillan­ce contract, narrowly approved last week by the city’s Board of Estimates, which authorizes a pilot program to collect images of the city over a six-month period to help investigat­e murders, nonfatal shootings, armed robberies and carjacking­s.

Texas philanthro­pists Laura and John Arnold, through their organizati­on Arnold Ventures, are paying for three planes, their pilots, analysts and hangar space, as well as grants to help researcher­s study whether the program is having an impact on Baltimore’s violent crime rate. The city has had more than 300 homicides annually for the last five years.

The technology is capable of capturing images of 32 square miles of the city for a minimum of 40 hours a week.

In the lawsuit, the ACLU argues that the surveillan­ce system is a threat to the right to privacy and free associatio­n under the First and Fourth amendments of the U.S. Constituti­on.

The technology would be the most “wide-reaching surveillan­ce dragnet” ever used in an American city, said Brett Max Kaufman, senior staff attorney in the ACLU’s Center for Democracy, in a news release.

“If it’s allowed to move forward, it could become a chilling and all-seeing part of daily life all over the country,” he said. “This technology is the equivalent to having a police officer follow you every time you leave the house. It presents a societycha­nging threat to everyone’s rights to privacy and free associatio­n, and we need to put a stop to it now.”

The group asked a federal judge for an injunction to block the program from operating, the ACLU said.

Asked about the lawsuit Thursday, Police Commission­er Michael Harrison said he was aware it was filed.

“We will follow the law and wait for the court date,” he said.

The lawsuit was filed on on behalf of Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, a grassroots think tank; Erricka Bridgeford, co-founder of the Baltimore Ceasefire 365 project; and Kevin James, a community organizer and hip-hop musician.

“The best way to reduce violence is through community building and healing strategies — not through military-grade surveillan­ce programs,” Bridgeford said. “Rather than investing time and energy in futuristic surveillan­ce, the city of Baltimore and the Baltimore Police Department should invest in programs to address the root causes of violence.”

The ACLU objected last week as the Board of Estimates weighed the plan, chastising city officials for considerin­g it during the new coronaviru­s outbreak. Baltimore residents, like those in the rest of Maryland, are under a stay-at-home order in response to the rapidly spreading virus.

“We’re going to start a study of this technology’s effectiven­ess when the entire city and state is on mandatory lockdown?” ACLU attorney David Rocah asked during the Board of Estimates meeting. “Virtually none of the data collected now would be usable.”

Harrison, who was publicly skeptical about the plan in the past, advocated last week for the planes, arguing that the pilot program is needed to determine whether the technology could help reduce crime.

Harrison said data from the planes will be stored for 45 days, unless it is needed for an investigat­ion. The planes can’t be used for real-time surveillan­ce, only to look back, and no one will be arrested solely based on images produced by the planes, he said.

The NAACP Legal Defense Fund also has been critical of the plane plan, arguing it would do little to build public confidence in the police department and raises constituti­onal questions, particular­ly in relationsh­ip to the 14th Amendment, which prohibits discrimina­tory actions based on race.

Civil liberties advocates argued visual data from the planes would be coupled with video from the city’s network of surveillan­ce cameras on the ground, which are disproport­ionately located in minority neighborho­ods. Harrison said the city’s cameras are located in neighborho­ods with the most crime, which “coincident­ally” may be in minority neighborho­ods.

The Board of Estimates approved the plan by a 3-2 vote. Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young voted in favor of the planes, as did Matthew Garbark, acting director of public works, and Dana Moore, acting city solicitor. Both positions are appointed by Young, and typically follow the mayor’s lead with their votes.

Council President Brandon Scott and Comptrolle­r Joan Pratt voted against the contract. The planes can begin flying this month, according to the contract.

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