Virtual Fence Should Not Become a Reality (9/10/2008)
Wasteful initiative
violates privacy of border residents
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: (202) 675-2312,
media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON, DC – Today, the
House Homeland Security Committee holds a hearing examining what has prevented
the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) virtual fence initiative from
becoming a reality. The American Civil Liberties Union reaffirms its opposition
to the failed and intrusive program that has been besieged with technological
difficulties since its inception and calls on Congress to prevent further
homeland security resources from being squandered on this effort.
The virtual fence, known as the Secure Border
Initiative Network or SBINet, raises serious privacy concerns with its proposed
use of technology near the border. The long-range surveillance cameras have the
capacity to observe the activities of innocent Americans who live near the
border, infringing upon their constitutional right to privacy. The looming guard
towers, visible for miles in the spare Southwestern landscape, cast a mood of
constant surveillance for U.S. border residents.
Furthermore, SBINet has been riddled with
problems from the planning stages. Major media outlets have reported that
SBINet’s technology has failed on the ground and the program is billions of
dollars over budget. The volatile weather and untamed environment have resulted
in fuzzy, unfocused images, rendering the technology unreliable for detecting
smugglers but nevertheless leading to privacy invasions into the lives of U.S.
citizens. In addition, the communication between the surveillance towers and the
command center in Tucson is delayed because of the physical distance between
them, creating even more problems for SBINet.
The following can be attributed to Timothy
Sparapani, ACLU Senior Legislative Counsel:
“A virtual fence along the U.S. border raises
far too many concerns for its implementation to move forward. The cameras being
used are incredibly intrusive and the watchtowers serve as a constant reminder
of how the Department of Homeland Security has imposed its privacy-infringing
regime not outside the U.S. but on millions of Americans living well within its
borders. If SBINet is propped up once again by Congress, it will be one large
step towards erecting a society under constant governmental surveillance, where
individual privacy means very little. But beyond the privacy concerns is the
issue of wasting limited homeland security resources on an initiative that has
proven itself a failure despite repeated attempts to resuscitate it. Diverting
money and manpower away from actual security is not what our nation needs, and
it’s not what Americans expect, nor deserve, from their government. Congress
should step in and prevent the virtual fence from becoming a
reality.”
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