Pubdate: Wed, 17 Apr 2002 Source: Hill, The (US) Copyright: 2002 The Hill Contact: http://www.hillnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1509 Author: Duncan Spencer COP'S CAMERAS Drug Market Is Unscanned Is it different when a camera -- instead of a police officer -- witnesses wrongdoing? That is the crux of a debate over the ever-wider use of surveillance instruments to monitor the behavior of motorists and citizens using public spaces. Having already been the "victim" of a surveillance camera sting (which resulted in considerable profanity and a $50 fine) for speeding on Suitland Pkwy. S.E., I have calmed down sufficiently to even like the idea. But District police have announced plans to use a net of linked video cameras to scan April 20's scheduled anti-war demonstrations. That's raised the hackles of the American Civil Liberties Union and the protest organizers, who might well believe they are being catalogued and mug shot and that the plans serve as a strong disincentive to joining the protests. The police raise issues of public safety and heightened security after Sept. 11 and even traffic control. Assistant Chief Terence Gainer insists that the cameras will not be aimed at places where people might expect to have privacy. The only on-Hill site for the 360-degree camera is at Union Station, where the front plaza of the station is under observation. Another camera sweeps the entire National Mall. But what is most bizarre about this innovation, is that D.C. Police officials have not apparently thought of using such cameras to illuminate goings on at drug markets in Hill East and elsewhere, particularly near the 15th and 16th and D St. S.E. intersections, whose precise location is well-known to the cops and residents alike. Since it's so easy to get rid of the evidence, officers complain that they can't easily make arrests and that when they do, they can't make their cases stick in court against the habitues. Even if cameras don't entirely solve the problem, they would most certainly persuade all but the most foolhardy dealers to move elsewhere. All but one site is west of North Capitol Street in areas not known for high criminal activity. The police plan is to activate the cameras when the protesters appear and hundreds, if not thousands, of officers are on the street to control them. The wonder is why this technology, which deters by threat, is not used more on troubled streets on the Hill. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth