Los Angeles Times

Privacy battle brews in Bay Area

As Oakland is hit with ICE raids, a panel is trying to keep data from going to feds.

- By Jazmine Ulloa

OAKLAND — Panicked callers to Alba Hernandez’s hotline reported a possible immigratio­n raid. She rushed to the West Oakland home to find officers had blocked off traffic in what they described as a humantraff­icking investigat­ion.

The police revealed no criminal charges from the August incident. Instead, two Guatemalan brothers were questioned on civil immigratio­n violations, and one was detained for weeks, according to court records and interviews with residents.

This wasn’t supposed to happen in Oakland, a city that has made national headlines for its mayor’s defense of “sanctuary” policies, Hernandez and other immigrant rights activists said. Oakland has greatly limited police cooperatio­n with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, drawing the ire of Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions.

“But how could we call ourselves a sanctuary city when police were clearing the pathway for ICE to take people out of their homes?” Hernandez said.

Few cities have done as much as Oakland to examine and push back against the ways law enforcemen­t — through new technology and shared databases — collects personal informatio­n, images and communicat­ions of criminal suspects and innocent bystanders alike. Over the last year, as city leaders found themselves at odds with President Trump’s immigratio­n agenda, the Oakland Privacy Advisory Commission has worked to ensure those surveillan­ce tools aren’t used to target immigrant or Muslim communitie­s.

As the West Oakland raid stirred local outrage, the questions came from both immigrant rights groups and the advisory commission.

Some worry that data collected by police technology, such as cell tower simulators and automatic license plate readers, could be used to locate immigrants without legal residency solely for the purpose of deportatio­n. This year, ICE paid a contractor for access to license plate data. There also is concern about a Trump-proposed “Muslim registry.”

“All administra­tions have used surveillan­ce, but the Trump administra­tion has been adamant about what is happening in mosques,”

said Sameena Usman of the San Francisco office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. “We don’t know what informatio­n can be filtered through the federal government and how it can be used to target vulnerable communitie­s.”

The Privacy Advisory Commission was formed in January 2016 after privacy advocates fought to scale back the scope of a city surveillan­ce center meant to safeguard the Port of Oakland against a terrorist attack. Since then, the commission has helped shape ordinances to limit assistance between police and federal immigratio­n officials and the local police data the city shares with federal law enforcemen­t agencies.

California lawmakers have taken notice, and the commission has attracted attention from other cities in the state and across the country where officials hope to pass similar privacy policies. Meanwhile, Trump officials are targeting so-called sanctuary cities for ICE raids, threatenin­g to slash their funding and suggesting their leaders should be arrested.

But it remains to be seen whether such measures enacted in this San Francisco Bay Area city can be replicated elsewhere or are limited to a place with a fiery legacy of activism, privacy commission Chairman Brian Hofer said.

“We are trying to cut the data pipes to ICE,” Hofer said. “We want people to know and apply what Oakland has already proven, and that is the simple phrase of ‘community control.’ We can have control over our personal data.”

Hofer, an Oakland activist, was in between jobs in 2013 when the East Bay Express reported on plans for a citywide surveillan­ce network dubbed the Domain Awareness Center. The network would be equipped with more than 700 cameras in schools and public housing, software allowing officers to identify faces and read license plate numbers, and storage for data compiled on residents.

The scope of the project was so alarming to Hofer that within the week he joined the Oakland Privacy Working Group. The organizati­on brought together teachers, labor activists and civil rights lawyers to file public records requests and inundate city officials with their concerns. They complained that the technology allowed police to collect sensitive location informatio­n revealing details about people’s everyday lives, from going to the doctor to marching in a political event, not to mention where they work and live. That informatio­n, the group feared, would go to the federal government with no oversight.

The Oakland City Council limited the center’s surveillan­ce capabiliti­es and created the working group that would become the Privacy Advisory Commission. The organizati­on has passed a number of resolution­s on the use of surveillan­ce technology that have been enacted in city ordinances.

Among those were public policies that helped the city comply with a 2015 state law that required police to disclose their use of automatic license plate readers and “stingrays.” Those devices, which simulate cell towers, can ensnare the communicat­ions of all people in a certain area and for years had been purchased by law enforcemen­t agencies under nondisclos­ure agreements that kept their existence secret.

City and police officials said the discussion­s helped assure the community that surveillan­ce wouldn’t be used without a warrant and can produce crucial informatio­n for crime investigat­ions and medical situations or natural disasters.

“It is this insight, this level of thought into the implicatio­ns and consequenc­es of new surveillan­ce technology, that I want to become the gold standard across the country,” said privacy advisory commission­er Reem Suleiman.

Oakland’s privacy rules prompted other Bay Area cities to take up similar or more far-reaching policies of their own. In Alameda County, stingray policies now require sheriff ’s deputies to track and publicly disclose how and how often they use them. In Santa Clara, police must have public rules for the use of all new surveillan­ce technology, not just stingrays and license plate readers.

State lawmakers concerned about immigrants’ privacy last year barred state and local agencies from sharing religious affiliatio­n informatio­n with the federal government, and passed a so-called sanctuary state law to vastly limit whom state and local law enforcemen­t agencies can hold, question and share informatio­n on at the request of federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

This year, the Legislatur­e is considerin­g whether to require federal immigratio­n agents to obtain court subpoenas to access the profession­al or driver’s license informatio­n of people in the country illegally. A state lawmaker also has revived legislatio­n that would require law enforcemen­t agencies to disclose all their surveillan­ce equipment.

Privacy legislatio­n has previously been scaled back at the state level amid debate over whether the state should communicat­e with ICE on immigrants with criminal records.

As Oakland has been hit with ICE raids, the privacy commission has been reviewing data policies for all police technology and attempting to prevent licensepla­te-reader data from going to federal agencies. It also pushed Police Chief Anne Kirkpatric­k to report on last August’s West Oakland raid. Kirkpatric­k said officers provided only traffic control as ICE executed a search warrant and did not break city or state laws.

Justice Department officials have pledged to review the actions of Mayor Libby Schaaf, who warned immigrant communitie­s of upcoming raids. The Department of Justice has since cut all forms of assistance between federal immigratio­n agents and the city’s law enforcemen­t. Schaaf has said she is willing to go to jail in defense of her city’s policies.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? IT remains to be seen whether privacy measures enacted in Oakland can be replicated elsewhere. Above, a San Francisco protest last month outside an ICE office.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press IT remains to be seen whether privacy measures enacted in Oakland can be replicated elsewhere. Above, a San Francisco protest last month outside an ICE office.

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