Chicago Sun-Times

DING-DONG SNITCH?

CPD plans trial partnershi­p with video doorbell company Ring to expand surveillan­ce reach, but critics argue it’s a ‘creepy’ step toward Big Brother-style rule

- DAVID STRUETT

The Chicago Police Department will soon join forces with the video doorbell company Ring — potentiall­y giving cops access to thousands of cameras fixed to residents’ front doors around the city.

Police have “no hesitation” to partner with Ring and will announce a pilot program soon, a Chicago police spokesman says.

“We think [Ring] has tremendous potential” to improve the department’s capabiliti­es, said CPD spokesman Anthony Guglielmi.

But critics fear a partnershi­p would be a dangerous and “creepy” step toward mass surveillan­ce. The sheer scale of the doorbellca­mera network hands law enforcemen­t too much power, critics like the American Civil Liberties Union say.

If CPD joins Ring, it would be the largest department in the nation to do so.

More than 400 police department­s nationwide have already partnered with the Amazon company. At least 25 Chicago suburban department­s have signed on in the past year — including Arlington Heights, Cicero, Naperville and Aurora.

Guglielmi said the department met with Ring a month ago, and has been talking to other police department­s about their experience­s with the program. He said a pilot program will be created soon. He did not elaborate on where it would take place or for how long it would take place.

Police would be able to solicit Chicago residents for doorbell video through Ring’s social media app, Neighbors, where users share videos showing everything from package thieves to, in one case, an Englewood drive-by shooting in which a woman was struck in the head by a stray bullet.

Police department­s in the program must go through Ring to ask for citizens’ video. To request a video, police must provide Ring with a case number and a limited time range and area. Ring then asks the relevant customers for consent to share the video with police.

Ring says that police cannot see customers’ identifyin­g informatio­n, and that customers are allowed to decline or opt out of future requests. Only an owner can access the doorbell’s live video stream, which can be transmitte­d live to users’ smartphone­s.

Chicago already has the largest network of surveillan­ce cameras in the country, numbering about 45,000 cameras, according to Guglielmi. Chicago already has its own surveillan­ce camera registry, in which citizens and businesses feed live outdoor video to Chicago police for use in emergencie­s, but so far there are just a few participat­ing homeowners because many home devices are not compatible with the city’s system, officials said.

It’s unclear how many more cameras would be added with a Ring partnershi­p. A spokespers­on for Ring declined to say how many customers it has in Chicago.

West suburban Naperville had more than 5,500 Ring customers when its department partnered with Ring in March, the Daily Southtown reported.

The Aurora Police Department joined Ring’s program in August 2018 — the first Chicago area department to do so. Aurora police have asked for and received more than a dozen videos from citizens, but so far, none has been used to prosecute a crime, according to Aurora police spokesman Paris Lewbell.

Instead of going door-to-door seeking it out, police can ask for tips and video evidence through the app, Lewbell said.

In April, a homeowner in west suburban Riverside saw someone trying to force open his front door on his Ring feed and called police. The homeowner showed the video evidence to police, but declined to press charges.

“If there was ever a video or event that displays how video doorbell systems are an important device in assisting in police investigat­ions ... this video would be it,” Riverside Police Chief Thomas Weitzel said at the time.

Civil rights concerns

But Ed Yohnka, spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, said opening up such a large network of cameras — including in areas that currently aren’t under heavy surveillan­ce — to police should at least get a public debate before going into practice.

“We all accept that when we walk up Michigan Avenue that we’ll be surveilled, but I don’t think we think about that when we’re in our neighborho­od walking our dog,” Yohnka said.

“There’s something about this that’s creepy, in terms of a mission creep. Doorbell cameras were first marketed as a convenienc­e for homeowners, and now they’re being used for surveillan­ce, Yohnka said.

“Could police one day be able to turn on the camera?” Yohnka continued. “It doesn’t take much imaginatio­n to think about considerin­g where we are now.”

Matthew Kugler, a privacy law professor at Northweste­rn University, believes the fact that police must request video only when they expect to find evidence and must get a user’s permission are adequate protection­s.

“You can easily paint the picture of a dystopia, but I don’t think this is a dystopia yet,” he said.

But Kugler said the public should be mindful of the direction society is heading if it leads to police someday having unfettered ability to monitor a camera on every street — or front door.

“I think it’s worth considerin­g the privacy cost of that,” Kugler said, “because we don’t want to live in a world where police have direct access to that.”

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