Cameras in Pioneer Park Pose Privacy Problems, Won't Reduce Crime
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu.org
SALT LAKE CITY – This
afternoon, Salt Lake City Police Chief Chris Burbank will announce a new Public
Space Camera Policy, as well as a program that will place four surveillance
cameras in Pioneer Park. Indeed, at the time of Chief Burbank's press
conference, the surveillance cameras will already be operational in the
park.
The ACLU of Utah appreciates that Chief Burbank made
us aware of this policy and program, and solicited our input with regards to
civil liberties issues. However, we nonetheless have concerns generally with
the use of surveillance cameras in public spaces, and specifically with Salt
Lake City's draft policy on Public Space Cameras. Most importantly, research
shows that the presence of these cameras, which pose a threat to certain
civil liberties, will not reduce crime and increase public safety, as the Police
Department hopes.
Our general concerns include the following
points:
• Technology can't replace community policing; surveillance cameras are not an easy, quick fix to preventing or solving crimes. Studies of similar programs in the UK and U.S. have shown that the effectiveness of cameras in deterring crime is questionable.
• Use of surveillance tools such as cameras can be abused for personal purposes (such as voyeurism) or to target individuals on the basis of race, gender or other classification.
• Surveillance cameras can have a chilling impact on First Amendment-protected gatherings, such as protest rallies and union meetings.
For these and other reasons, cities around the U.S. have
backed away from the use of surveillance cameras in the pursuit of public
safety. The city of Cambridge, Mass., recently voted to ban the use of
surveillance cameras because it concluded the potential threats to invasion of
privacy and individual civil liberties outweighed the purported benefits. A
recent study in San Francisco, Calif., concluded that cameras used there failed
in their mission of reducing violent crime and did not make people safer.
Our specific concerns with the Salt Lake City draft policy
include, but are not limited to, the following points:
• The policy does not explicitly outline how members of the general public will be able to seek redress, should surveillance cameras be abused in any way. Legally-enforceable regulations are needed to ensure that the public has an avenue of recourse, should the cameras be used inappropriately or in violation of an individual's civil liberties.
• The section of the policy called "Record Keeping" does not specify the extent to which images and/or logs of recordings will be shared with governmental or non-governmental agencies, groups and organizations. Residents and community members deserve assurances as to how this information will be "shared" outside the Salt Lake Police Department.
• Once such a system is in place, the established technological infrastructure is open to improper use and abuse. While we appreciate that it is not the goal of the Police Department to use these cameras for purposes other than preventing or solving crimes, these cameras could be used in a problematic fashion. We ask that guarantees be made to members of the general public that cameras will not be used in a discriminatory fashion or to monitor activity that is protected by the First Amendment.
The ACLU of Utah remains very concerned that the
civil liberty costs of video surveillance systems, coupled with the limited
success of such systems in decreasing crime, raise serious doubts about the
appropriateness of their implementation in Salt Lake City.
The American Civil Liberties Union nationally is involved with
many civil liberties cases pertaining to public surveillance. For more
information, visit www.youarebeingwatched.us. We
also recommend visiting the website of the ACLU of Northern California to review
the report, "Under the Watchful Eye: The Proliferation of Video Surveillance
Systems in California,"
(www.aclunc.org/issues/government_surveillance/under_the_watchful_eye_the_proliferation_o
f_video_surveillance_systems_in_california,_executive_summary.shtml)
Learn more about the ACLU of Utah's programs and priorities in our state at www.acluutah.org.

