Chicago Sun-Times

Using police drones at rallies smacks of Red Squad snooping

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Chicagoans should be able to gather “peaceably” for a public protest or rally without Big Brother watching every move from an eye in the sky — a police drone.

As Illinois law stands now, the police can spy on such events with a drone only if they suspect criminal activity and get a warrant first from a judge. The cops are allowed to blow off the requiremen­t for a warrant only when there is a high risk of terrorism or loss of life, or they are searching for a missing person or taking crime scene photos.

This is a law that makes sense. It strikes a good balance between keeping us safe and respecting our rights. Not for nothing did it draw overwhelmi­ng support in the Legislatur­e when it was enacted six years ago.

The Senate approved it 52- 1, the House 105- 12.

Flash forward to 2018: There’s a strong move afoot to gut the law. A bill in the Legislatur­e would eliminate the requiremen­t that the police obtain a warrant for the drone surveillan­ce of large- scale events. The bill is being pushed by City Hall, and it has momentum in the House. It already has passed in the Senate.

Let’s shoot this one out of the sky. Unwarrante­d snooping, as any Chicagoan who knows our city’s history can attest, could become a real danger.

The bill says drone use would be “limited to legitimate public safety purposes,” an entirely too vague collection of words. Who decides what’s “legitimate”? We foresee a chilling of your First Amendment rights of free speech and assembly.

Allow us to remind the bill’s sponsors, Sen. Martin Sandoval and Rep. John D’Amico, that Chicago has a nasty reputation when it comes to police snooping. The city still bears the scars of the Chicago Police Department’s notorious Red Squad, which existed for most of the 20th century and ramped up spying in the 1960s and 1970s.

Red Squad targets included people who marched for civil rights or against the Vietnam War, journalist­s, union members, people who opposed Mayor Richard J. Daley, judges and members of Congress. In 1975, a Cook County grand jury said that Chicago had “all the earmarks of a police state” because of eavesdropp­ing by police spies and other bad conduct.

“This is a city with a history of sending people out to record protesters. Now imagine doing it with facial recognitio­n technology,” says Ed Yohnka of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

Americans need more safeguards against facial recognitio­n technology, not fewer. Images taken by drones could pile up like secret treasure for law enforcemen­t, with a whole lot more images of law- abiders than law- breakers.

The bill’s proponents say the cops need drones to help police events like Lollapaloo­za. But if there is a legitimate threat, the current law allows for the necessary exceptions to seeking a warrant first.

“People aren’t thinking all that carefully about it,” state Sen. Daniel Biss said of lawmakers who voted to pass the bill. Biss sponsored the 2013 law that set guidelines for police to use drones.

The proposed changes would give powerful people in law enforcemen­t and city halls the ability to develop a database of every person at a protest, Biss told us. “It’s really, really dangerous,” he added.

Chicago mayoral spokespers­on Julienn Kaviar wrote in an email to Sun- Times reporter Fran Spielman that “the proposed updates would not change the existing privacy protection­s and limitation­s under the current law.”

We couldn’t disagree more. This bill would undercut the law’s important protection­s for people who want to engage in peaceful protests. It would give cops free rein to take video of every single protester at any kind of large event, public or private.

It would leave law enforcemen­t unchecked. It would tell people who want to use their voices to criticize the president, the mayor, the police or powerful companies that somebody’s watching them — too closely.

Been there and done that. Let’s not do it again.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Students attend a National School Day Walkout on April 20 as a response to school violence.
GETTY IMAGES Students attend a National School Day Walkout on April 20 as a response to school violence.
 ??  ?? Martin Sandoval
Martin Sandoval
 ??  ?? John D’Amico
John D’Amico

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