Los Angeles Times

Police, others expand use of drones

As efforts to license the surveillan­ce craft for flights in U.S. airspace rise, so do privacy concerns.

- By Brian Bennett and Joel Rubin

WASHINGTON — While a national debate has erupted over the Obama administra­tion’s lethal drone strikes overseas, federal authoritie­s have stepped up efforts to license surveillan­ce drones for law enforcemen­t and other uses in U.S. airspace, spurring growing concern about violations of privacy.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion said Friday it had issued 1,428 permits to domestic drone operators since 2007, far more than were previously known. Some 327 permits are still listed as active.

Operators include police, universiti­es, state transporta­tion department­s and at least seven federal agencies. The remotely controlled aircraft vary widely, from devices as small as model airplanes to large unarmed Predators.

The FAA, which has a September 2015 deadline from Congress to open the nation’s airspace to drone traffic, has estimated 10,000 drones could be aloft five years later. The FAA this week solicited proposals to create six sites across the country to test drones, a crucial step before widespread government and commercial use is approved.

Local and state law enforcemen­t agencies are expected to be among the largest customers.

Earlier this month, TV footage showed a midsized drone circling over the bun-

ker in southeast Alabama where a 65-year-old gunman held a 5-year-old boy hostage. After a tense standoff, an FBI team stormed the bunker, rescued the boy and shot his captor. Authoritie­s refused to say who was operating the AeroVironm­ent drone, which has a 9-foot wingspan.

In Colorado, the Mesa County Sheriff ’s Office has used a fixed-wing drone to search for lost hikers in the mountains, and a helicopter drone to help crews battling fires. Flying manned planes or helicopter­s would cost at least $600 an hour, explained Ben Miller, who heads the program.

“We f ly [drones] for less than $25 an hour,” Miller said. “It’s just a new way to put a camera up that’s affordable.”

Big-city police department­s, including Los Angeles, have tested drones but are holding back on buying them until the FAA issues clear guidelines about operating in congested airspace, among other issues.

“You’ve got to take baby steps with this,” said Michael Downing, the LAPD deputy chief for counter-terrorism and special operations.

Los Angeles Police Department officials went to Simi Valley in December, he said, to watch a demonstrat­ion of a helicopter-like device that measured about 18 inches on each side and was powered by four propellers. It could fly about 90 minutes on its battery.

Downing said the LAPD was “pursuing the idea of purchasing” drones, but wouldn’t do so unless the FAA granted permission to f ly them, and until the department could draw up policies on how to keep within privacy laws.

If the LAPD bought drones, Downing said, it initially would use them at major public events such as the Oscars or large protests. In time, drones could be flown to track fleeing suspects and assist in investigat­ions. Tiny drones could even be used to f ly inside buildings to shoot video if a suspect has barricaded himself within.

In theory, drones can offer unblinking eye-in-thesky coverage. They can carry high-resolution video cameras, infrared sensors, license plate readers, listening devices and other hightech gear. Companies have marketed drones disguised as sea gulls and other birds to mask their use.

That’s the problem, according to civil liberties groups. The technology is evolving faster than the law. Congress and courts haven’t determined whether drone surveillan­ce would violate privacy laws more than manned planes or helicopter­s, or whether drone operators may be held liable for criminal trespassin­g, stalking or harassment.

“Americans have the right to know if and how the government is using drones to spy on them,” said Catherine Crump, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, which has called for updating laws to protect privacy.

A backlash has already started.

In Congress, Reps. Ted Poe (R-Texas) and Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose) introduced privacy legislatio­n Thursday that would require police to get a warrant or a court order before operating a drone to collect informatio­n on individual­s.

“We need to protect against obtrusive search and surveillan­ce by government and civilian use,” Poe said in a telephone interview. A similar bill failed last year.

Legislatur­es in 15 states are considerin­g proposals to limit drone use. The City Council in Charlottes­ville, Va., passed a resolution on Feb. 4 barring local police from using drones — which they don’t yet have — to collect evidence in criminal cases.

In Seattle, Mayor Mike McGinn ordered police to return two Draganflye­r X6 helicopter drones earlier this month after privacy advocates and others protested. The police said they had hoped to use them for search-and-rescue operations.

Federal agencies f ly drones to assist in disasters, check flood damage, do crop surveys and more. U.S. Customs and Border Protection f lies the largest fleet, 10 unarmed Predators, along the northern and southern borders to help track smugglers and illegal immigrants.

Although flying drones might appear as easy as playing a video game, pilots and crews require extensive training.

In 2004 and 2005, the U.S. Marshals Service tested two small drones in remote areas to help them track fugitives, according to law enforcemen­t officials and documents released to the ACLU under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. The Marshals Service abandoned the program after both drones crashed.

Except in rare cases, the military is barred from using drones in U.S. airspace to conduct surveillan­ce or pursue individual­s. No state or federal agency has proposed arming domestic drones with weapons, but the prospect has raised alarms in Congress and elsewhere.

In response to a question during an online Google chat Thursday, President Obama said drones had never been used to kill “an American citizen on American soil.”

“The rules outside of the United States are going to be different than the rules in- side the United States, in part because our capacity, for example, to capture terrorists in the United States are very different than in the foothills or mountains of Afghanista­n or Pakistan,” Obama said.

No drone was sent up to help find suspected killer Christophe­r Dorner after his truck was found burning near Big Bear Lake on Feb. 7, said Al Daniel, an officer in the aviation division of the San Bernardino County Sheriff ’s Department. But Customs and Border Protection transmitte­d secure video from a Pilatus PC-12 plane to police commanders on the ground.

Despite a massive manhunt, Dorner vanished and authoritie­s speculated he had escaped to Mexico. Five days later, however, he was found in a snowbound cabin near his truck and died after a shootout and fire.

The long delay, and the embarrassi­ng fact that Dorner was hiding close by the police command post, sparked sharp criticism of police tactics and abilities.

Steve Whitmore, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department, said an aerial drone might have helped find Dorner more quickly.

“The search would have been much wider and quicker because you’d have an unmanned aircraft looking,” he said. “You can cover more ground.”

 ?? Jim Ross
NASA ?? AN UNMANNED IKHANA CRAFT heads out to take images of a Lake Arrowhead wildfire in this 2007 photo. Legislatur­es in 15 states, driven by privacy concerns, are considerin­g proposals to limit drone use.
Jim Ross NASA AN UNMANNED IKHANA CRAFT heads out to take images of a Lake Arrowhead wildfire in this 2007 photo. Legislatur­es in 15 states, driven by privacy concerns, are considerin­g proposals to limit drone use.

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