The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Neighborho­od security vs. personal privacy

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now operated by private citizens and communitie­s. Coupled with the popular personal doorbell cameras from companies like Ring and Nest, never before has so much surveillan­ce data been in the hands of private citizens. And it’s all legal.

The technology itself isn’t new. Many police department­s have their own automatic license plate readers to scan popular intersecti­ons. And some vehicle repossessi­on companies attach them to their cars, driving streets and parking lots scanning for cars marked for repossessi­on.

What is new is the number of private communitie­s now leasing the cameras to watch their streets and homes — sometimes sharing their data with law enforcemen­t.

The Atlanta-based maker of license-plate reading cameras, Flock Safety, said about 100 neighborho­ods, apartment complexes or private land owners in metro Atlanta now have automatic readers. Some of the largest police department­s in the state have formal agreements with Ring and Flock, allowing officers to access some of the privately gathered footage while investigat­ing crimes, if homeowners agree to it.

Many officials and residents see the technology as an essential addition to the police’s crime-fighting toolkit, and said privately owned license plate cameras have already helped solve several crimes in residentia­l areas. But homeowners also are asking about the privacy risk the cameras pose, and the potential for over-surveillan­ce or misuse.

“These surveillan­ce tools might protect public safety, but they also can give power to people to use it at their discretion — not necessaril­y for fair or good purposes,” said Peter Swire, a privacy expert and Georgia Tech professor. “Solving crimes is good. Putting this video in the hands of busybody neighbors might not be so good.”

Privacy vs. safety

The Sidestreet neighborho­od decided to install a Flock camera in late July after a resident’s car was stolen, and their old security camera was unhelpful in getting good footage of the car, McCoy said. The system costs $2,000 for a two-year lease, but the company emphasizes that the individual communitie­s own the footage and data from their camera.

The solar-powered, motion-activated Flock system can tell how often every car comes into the subdivisio­n, and knows that some vehicles belong to residents.

McCoy sat at her computer on a recent afternoon, scrolling through the list of cars that entered her neighborho­od during a 10-hour period. She does this every day, she said, “just out of curiosity.” As a member of the homeowners associatio­n board, she is allowed to view all of the footage from the camera.

She spotted one car that entered the neighborho­od just four of the last 18 days, according to the camera.

“That’s weird,” McCoy said. “Oh, I know why, because they were out of town.”

Many of her neighbors supported buying the camera, McCoy said, though some had concerns about the 24/7 surveillan­ce.

“There are people here who think it’s an intrusion of their privacy, and they don’t like it. Don’t think we should’ve gotten it,” said McCoy, a retired health care administra­tor. But Flock says its system doesn’t collect any private data, and McCoy can’t see where the cars go after entering Sidestreet. Personally, she added, “I don’t care that you can see what time I come in and out. Who cares?”

Flock CEO Garrett Langley said he was inspired to make the product because he felt there were more nonviolent offenses happening around Atlanta that the camera could help solve. Now the company estimates it helps solve two crimes a day nationwide.

Just last month, police in Sandy Springs said they arrested a man accused of stealing packages and mail from homes, thanks in part to a neighborho­od Flock camera. The camera captured the suspect’s license plate when he was in the area, authoritie­s said, and they later found him with eight credit cards with different names and 17 pieces of mail with assorted names.

Langley, a Georgia Tech graduate, is well aware of the privacy and surveillan­ce concerns associated with the devices.

“It would be irresponsi­ble to say any system like this is without the potential for misuse,” he said. But he emphasized that public roads and the license plates of cars that travel them are public informatio­n. “Compared to the amount of informatio­n you share on Facebook and online, it’s really not a lot.”

According to Flock, the data gathered belongs to the camera’s user but like other surveillan­ce systems, the data could be subject to court subpoenas. The company encourages larger communitie­s to internally safeguard its video recordings by only allowing a select few residents to have permanent access.

Neighborho­ods can opt in to give the local police department access to footage while they are investigat­ing a crime, giving pause to some privacy experts who say there should be more oversight in place to prevent possible abuses of power.

“When the police get new surveillan­ce powers, I tend to think there should be new accountabi­lity mechanisms as well,” privacy expert Swire said.

Residents in the McGinnis Reserve subdivisio­n in Suwanee installed a Flock license-plate reading camera about two weeks ago at the entrance to their 172home community close to Buford Highway, near a picturesqu­e lake and greenway. They’ve turned to the technology after two home break-ins went unsolved last year. Footage from doorbell cameras wasn’t good enough to identify the burglars or their car.

In a clubhouse looking out on a private pool, neighbors met recently with Flock staff and police officials, who fielded a wide range of questions about how the system works and how the data is used, balancing privacy concerns with their goal to prevent crime.

“I think it’s going to be great, mostly because we’re not a gated community and we are right off a busy road,” resident Kathy Heidish, 75, said of the new camera. “And I think it’s going to be a good way to deter people from coming in.”

‘Everything is being recorded’

The advanced technology presents a treasure trove of potential new evidence for police. Security companies are taking advantage of that.

At least 20 local police department­s — including DeKalb, Sandy Springs and Marietta — have either purchased their own cameras from Flock or have a relationsh­ip with the company allowing them access to some footage, if the community also agrees.

The cameras are also connected to the National Crime Informatio­n Center “hot list,” meaning local police who have a partnershi­p with Flock can automatica­lly get an alert every time a camera spots a stolen car, or a car whose owner has a warrant out for their arrest.

“Whenever a car drives by, it’s as if a detective was on the corner taking notes,” Langley, the company CEO, said.

In Marietta, the police department purchased several Flock cameras to station at areas with high crime rates. During a ninemonth test run, crime rates dropped 34% in the area with the reader. The police department partly attributed the drop to the cameras, though it did not say how many crimes the camera had helped solve.

Ring’s doorbell cameras are known for capturing alarming video of break-ins or package thefts on porches. The Amazon-owned company encourages users to share their pictures or videos on its digital neighborho­od watch app, called “Neighbors,” and allows many police department­s to access that footage.

“We live in a world now where everything is being recorded. It certainly helps us do our jobs when things happen,” Dunwoody police spokesman Sgt. Robert Parsons said. “It’s easier for us to put the pieces together.”

Some, however, worry the system could cause homeowners to allege a crime in circumstan­ces where there isn’t one, and possibly perpetuate racial profiling. Experts say people of color, particular African Americans, are more likely to be targeted by police or deemed “suspicious” because of their race.

“It’s quite evident that profiling exists in America,” said Mereda Davis Johnson, a DeKalb County commission­er who chairs the public safety committee. “Me being black, and having a son that is a young adult ... it’s just something that I have to be aware of, because I know it’s there and I have to balance that with public safety.”

Johnson, who has video cameras around her home, initially expressed concern that the Ring and Flock footage could be misused or manipulate­d. She voted to allow DeKalb police to participat­e in both partnershi­ps, however, and said the county should review the programs in a year.

Parsons acknowledg­ed that Ring footage sometimes leads homeowners to make vague reports of a “suspicious person.” He said one Ring user posted a video alleging that a fake police officer had knocked on their door. It was actually a fully uniformed Dunwoody officer who was there for a legitimate reason, Parsons said.

Swire, the privacy expert, said the police should not be able to access personal surveillan­ce footage without a warrant, and encouraged Atlanta-area government­s who want to share home surveillan­ce video to adopt official rules like Seattle’s, which regulate how department­s can see the potential evidence.

“Police access to videos without any warrant,” he said, “is a step towards having ‘Big Brother’ cameras wherever we go.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CASEY SYKES ?? A Flock license-plate reader, powered by a solar panel, is mounted on a pole at the entrance to the Sidestreet subdivisio­n in Brookhaven. The camera is expected to act as a crime deterrent and provide informatio­n to police if crimes do occur.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CASEY SYKES A Flock license-plate reader, powered by a solar panel, is mounted on a pole at the entrance to the Sidestreet subdivisio­n in Brookhaven. The camera is expected to act as a crime deterrent and provide informatio­n to police if crimes do occur.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? Flock Safety representa­tive Ben Francis talks with residents of the Lake McGinnis Reserve Community about their newly installed surveillan­ce license-plate camera last week.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER Flock Safety representa­tive Ben Francis talks with residents of the Lake McGinnis Reserve Community about their newly installed surveillan­ce license-plate camera last week.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CASEY SYKES ?? Sidestreet resident Jo McCoy also has a doorbell camera at her residence, in addition to the license-plate reader at the subdivisio­n entrance.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CASEY SYKES Sidestreet resident Jo McCoy also has a doorbell camera at her residence, in addition to the license-plate reader at the subdivisio­n entrance.

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