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Matthew Cella / Washington Times | July 31 2006 The District's emergency anti-crime law gives the police chief far more power in using surveillance cameras as crime-fighting tools than some of his counterparts in other cities across the country. Under a 90-day law recently enacted, Metropolitan Police Department Chief Charles H. Ramsey has wide latitude -- and final say -- on placement of the 23 surveillance cameras that are costing the city $2.3 million. He is required only to notify a D.C. Council member and an advisory neighborhood commissioner of his intention to place a camera in their jurisdiction. San Francisco has set up 33 "neighborhood
safety cameras." The devices can be deployed only upon a recommendation
of the mayor's director of the Office of Criminal Justice after a public
hearing before the civilian police commission. "There ought to be careful regulation on the way any camera is used," said Arthur Spitzer, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of the National Capital Area. Mr. Spitzer said it is "a good
idea" not to give police departments exclusive control of surveillance
networks. For those exceptions, the chief must notify the public when the cameras have been removed. San Francisco requires a sign within
25 feet of a camera's location declaring that the area is under surveillance.
The law has no provisions for deploying cameras in neighborhoods without
public notice. Officers can review footage only if their rank is inspector or higher and after they have submitted a written request that has been approved through the chain of command. In Chicago, the cameras are easily identifiable and bear the police department logo. "They're not covert cameras," said Kevin Smith, a spokesman for the city's Office of Emergency Management and Communications. "They're in white boxes with big letters, and they have blue flashing lights that resemble Chicago police cars." New York City's police department in
April deployed the first of what is expected to be about 500 additional
cameras in public places. The cameras, bearing the police department's
seal, monitor high-crime areas in real time. Officials with the city's Office of
Corporation Counsel said no special legislation was required to deploy
the cameras. -------------------------------------------------------------- INFOWARS: BECAUSE THERE'S A WAR ON FOR YOUR MIND
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