Fighting Crime From Above?

A blog about surveillance cameras in public and private spaces

Fighting Crime From Above? header image 1

Bruce Schneier: Spy cameras won't make us safer

March 2nd, 2010 · Public Policy Failure

Via CNN

On January 19, a team of at least 15 people assassinated Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Mabhouh. Dubai police released video footage of 11 of them. Although it was obviously a very professional operation, the 27 minutes of video is fascinating in its banality.

Team members walk through the airport, check into and out of hotels, get into and out of taxis. They make no effort to hide themselves from the cameras, sometimes seeming to stare directly into them. They obviously don't care that they're being recorded, and — in fact — the cameras didn't prevent the assassination, nor as far as we know have they helped as yet in identifying the killers.

Pervasive security cameras don't substantially reduce crime. This fact has been demonstrated repeatedly: in San Francisco, California, public housing; in a New York apartment complex; in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; in Washington; in study after study in both the U.S. and the U.K. Nor are they instrumental in solving many crimes after the fact.

There are exceptions, of course, and proponents of cameras can always cherry-pick examples to bolster their argument. These success stories are what convince us; our brains are wired to respond more strongly to anecdotes than to data. But the data are clear: CCTV cameras have minimal value in the fight against crime.

Although it's comforting to imagine vigilant police monitoring every camera, the truth is very different, for a variety of reasons: technological limitations of cameras, organizational limitations of police and the adaptive abilities of criminals. No one looks at most CCTV footage until well after a crime is committed. And when the police do look at the recordings, it's very common for them to be unable to identify suspects. Criminals don't often stare helpfully at the lens and — unlike the Dubai assassins — tend to wear sunglasses and hats. Cameras break far too often.

Even when they afford quick identification — think of the footage of the September 11 terrorists going through airport security or the July 7 London transport bombers just before the bombs exploded — police are often able to identify those suspects even without the cameras. Cameras afford a false sense of security, encouraging laziness when we need police to be vigilant.

The solution isn't for police to watch the cameras more diligently. Unlike an officer walking the street, cameras look only in particular directions at particular locations.

Criminals know this and can easily adapt by moving their crimes to places not watched by a camera — and there will always be such places.
And although a police officer on the street can respond to a crime in progress, someone watching a CCTV screen can only dispatch an officer to arrive much later. By their very nature, cameras result in underused and misallocated police resources.

Cameras aren't completely ineffective, of course. Used properly, they're effective in reducing crime in enclosed areas with minimal foot traffic. Combined with adequate lighting, they substantially reduce both personal attacks and auto-related crime in multistory parking garages. And sometimes it is cost-effective for a store to install cameras to catch shoplifters or a casino to install cameras to detect cheaters.
But these are instances where there is a specific risk at a specific location.

The important question isn't whether cameras solve past crime or deter future crime; it's whether they're a good use of resources. They're expensive, both in money and in their Orwellian effects on privacy and civil liberties. Their inevitable misuse is another cost; police have spied on naked women in their own homes, shared nude images, sold best-of videos and even spied on national politicians. Though we might be willing to accept these downsides for a real increase in security, cameras don't provide that.

Despite our predilection for technological solutions over human ones, the funds now spent on CCTV cameras would be far better spent on hiring and training police officers.

We live in a unique time in our society: Cameras are everywhere, but we can still see them. Ten years ago, cameras were much rarer than they are today. Ten years from now, they'll be so small, you won't even notice them.

Already, people can buy surveillance cameras in household objects to spy on their spouses and baby sitters — I particularly like the one hidden in a shower mirror — or cameras in pens to spy on their colleagues, and they can remotely turn on laptop cameras to spy on anyone. Companies are developing police state-type CCTV surveillance technologies for China, technology that will find its way into countries like the U.S.

If universal surveillance were the answer, lots of us would have moved to the former East Germany. If surveillance cameras were the answer, camera-happy London, with something like 500,000 of them at a cost of $700 million, would be the safest city on the planet.

We didn't, and it isn't, because surveillance and surveillance cameras don't make us safer. The money spent on cameras in London, and in cities across America, could be much better spent on actual policing.

Bruce Schneier is a security technologist and author of "Beyond Fear: Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World." Read more of his writing at  www.schneier.com.

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Newark Airport surveillance cameras don't record

January 6th, 2010 · Public Surveillance Failure

Five months ago, a mentally disturbed man entered Laguardia Airport with a fake bomb attached to his body. The security officers tackled and subdued the wanne-be terrorist and then looked for the footage from the surveillance camera.  It turns out the groggy cameras were broken, pointing the wrong direction, or had very grainy footage.  Oy! Well, at least we all learned from this situation, right Newark Airport?

From the NY Times:

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — New Jersey's U.S. senators slammed federal authorities Wednesday over a security breach at Newark Liberty International Airport over the weekend and called for upgrades to surveillance camera systems and better training and accountability for security officers.

At a news conference in a terminal adjacent to the one that was shut down for six hours Sunday night, Sens. Robert Menendez and Frank Lautenberg and Rep. Donald Payne used terms like "major negligence" and "management failure" to describe the incident, in which an unidentified man entered Terminal C through an exit door and was not seen by the Transportation Security Administration officer assigned to the area.

The breach exposed flaws at three levels: at the exit, where the security officer failed to see the man entering a secure area; the subsequent discovery that security cameras weren't working properly and hadn't been storing images, and a resulting delay of about an hour before law enforcement authorities were notified, after TSA officials viewed images recorded on cameras owned by Continental Airlines.

Menendez called it "unfathomable" that the recording system wasn't already being checked routinely and suggested a system that would provide a warning when it stopped recording.

"There clearly are innovations that exist that will set off an alarm if your system shuts off," he said. "You shouldn't depend on whether or not there's a security guard checking every hour on the hour — what if in the interim there was a failure of the system?"

In a statement, the TSA said it was working with the Port Authority "to ensure consistent performance and confirm operational readiness" of the camera system.

Senators, I have the solution and it's rather easy: regulate all surveillance technology.

By regulating surveillance technologies, standards could be set regarding minimal technology effectiveness standards.  These standards would include: resolution rates, storage retention thresholds, the use of video analytics in specific camera contexts like airport terminals.  If government doesn't  begin to regulate these devices, we'll end up like the U.K. – millions of useless cameras where it takes an average of 1,000 cameras to solve one crime.

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Homeland security funds used for license plate readers at California mall

September 14th, 2009 · Public-Private Success

Photo Courtesy news10.net

News 10 in Calfornia has an interesting story about surveillance cameras and license plate readers co-funded by homeland security at the Arden Fair Mall.

SACRAMENTO, CA – Homeland Security funds have poured into the state of California since the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

According to the Center for Investigative Reporting, California counties have received almost $2 billion in anti-terrorism grants. Sacramento County has received $79 million.

Arden Fair Mall Security Chief Steve Reed said he's received $100,000 in federal funds. The money has gone toward two high-tech surveillance systems.

"This actually enables us to record data with our 142 cameras that mall purchased for $1.5 million," Reed said. "That money came from mall management, but it enabled me to tie the cameras into a system the federal government paid for."

Reed showed off that system set up in two offices at Arden Fair Mall in Sacramento. "We have a set of eyes here and another one if I'm watching in my office. And we have two more sets of eyes at the security information desk in the middle of the mall," he said.

Security officers watch escalators, stores, hallways, indoor and outdoor walkways and parking lots. "After a day of things that happen at the mall, if there's any footage that we need to retrieve, we can get it. We can give it to the appropriate law enforcement agency if they need it," Reed explained.

Security officers can zoom in and make hard copies of closeups. They can also record images onto a disk.

"We've been able to reduce crimes significantly and record slip and falls," Reed said. "If there's any kind of maintenance or safety issues we can take care of them because we see every nook and cranny at the mall which covers 77 acres."

Reed spent the rest of the federal funds on license plate readers mounted on security vehicles. "Officers drive up and down our parking lots and structures taking pictures of license plates," he said. "Everyday we're able to download a list of plates from Sacramento police stolen car reports. If the reader sees that plate, it sounds an alarm and we can call the authorities."

According to Reed, since the system was installed, it has found 21 stolen vehicles and resulted in the arrest of 22 individuals.

Sacramento Regional Transit has received $2 million from Homeland Security, according to Doug Voska, a Sacramento police officer who is under contract to RT. He runs the transit system's Video Control Center.

Like the mall, Voska has officers peering at screens attached to security cameras located at light rail stations and on board train cars.

"Prior to this, we had a piece-meal camera system with a few cameras here and there," said Voska. "Now we have a much better system and we can monitor each camera live as it sees what's happening now. And we can prevent any acts of terrorism and crimes."

Voska said officers can quickly be dispatched to the scene if problems arise.

"Part of the Homeland Security funding also provided for a public awareness campaign," Voska said. "Signs are posted telling passengers about the surveillance and how they can help us and protect the transit system."

Voska added that public response has been positive. "It not only makes them feel safer. They know they're actually safer," he said.

This chief of security is a pretty sharp guy.  He's got the 77 acres covered and is claims the technology is helping in the following areas:

  • Reduction of crime in "slip and falls"
  • Can easily spot maintenace issues
  • 21 stolen vehicles were identified, police were called and 22 criminals were arrested
  • Officers can be dispatched to the scene much quicker
  • Citizens not only feel safer, they are safer
  • They can prevent crimes and terrorism

Besides for the crazy comment on preventing terrorism, the system at Arden Fair Mall sounds quite effective in a few areas.  The reduction in claims for "slip and falls" can have a positive effect on the court system, and their use of  license plate scanning has proven to be highly effective.  This news article is reinforcing the fact that parking lot cameras can be highly effective with the correct technologies and practices.

It's my belief private cameras in private spaces are much more effective than public cameras in public places.  Since the police and legal system can do their job much more effectively with evidence from the cameras, the Arden Fair Mall is a shining example of a public-private success story.

Related:
Mall Tip Leads Police To Stolen Car
Arden Fair Mall's new camera system thwarts car thieves

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Guangdong province installs 1 million cameras, claims success in buses

September 14th, 2009 · No Verdict

Image source www2.dijon.inra.fr/

Image source www2.dijon.inra.fr/

China Daily had an interesting article about surveillance cameras in China's Guangdong province.

GUANGZHOU: A new province-wide intelligent video surveillance system comprising 1 million cameras is putting criminals in the frame in Guangdong province.

The system, which will be fully operational next year, will automatically alert police about fights, robberies and other major crimes and incidents, according to a police officer from Guangdong provincial department of public security on Friday.

The cameras are being installed on major highways, busy streets, railway stations, bus terminals, piers and other public places in the province.

Social security will be constantly monitored in major public places in the province where the crime rate is higher than many regions in the Chinese mainland.

"The new video surveillance system is expected to cast an inescapable net that will help reduce the crime rate in the prosperous province," said the police officer, who declined to be named.

Guangdong has already installed more than 900,000 video cameras in Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhongshan, Dongguan, Chaozhou, Zhuhai and other major cities in the Pearl River Delta, which borders Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions.

And, even though the system is not fully up to speed yet, it has helped police detain more than 10,000 suspects since the beginning of the year. More than 18,000 cases of street crime have been prevented or fought, the officer added.

The cameras will be part of an advanced video network that will link local police crime-reporting centers to every major public place in the region's cities.

Many locals have welcomed the cameras.

"The new intelligent video surveillance system will certainly help deter suspects from committing crimes in public places," said Chen Wensi, a white-collar worker in Guangzhou. "It should be good news for most of the Cantonese people."

Law and order had been a problem in the province, added Chen, who had two mobile phones stolen in two months earlier this year.

In another development, Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, has equipped all of its public buses with surveillance cameras to deter pickpockets and robbers.

The cameras are fitted to the front, middle and rear of all the city's 8,000 public buses.

And there has been a notable reductin in the number of pickpocket, robbery and sexual harassment cases since the video surveillance system was brought into operation in the southern metropolis this year.

The officials in the article made a few claims:

  • The system has helped detain 10,000 suspects
  • 18,000 street crimes have been fought
  • Pickpocketing, sexual harassment, and robberies are down on public buses

While the numbers quoted in this article appear high (10,000 detained,  18,000 fought), they are quite low in relation to the number of cameras installed – one million.  These statistics also do not include conviction rates which will certaintly be much lower.  Perhaps even as low as the UK, which is only able to convict one criminal for every 1,000 cameras installed.

The official in this article also claims there has been crime reduction success in public buses.  I agree and believe it's logical to assume there is potential for surveillance cameras to be effective in buses (and possibly taxis).  This may be due to the fact people are in closer quarters, are aware of the cameras, and there is also potential for the higher camera image quality due to the fixed distance factor.  However, this fact has yet to be proven by academics.

It would be nice to see a government report some statistics on the use of privately owned cameras.  When this happens, a comparison can be made between the two sectors in the two spaces (public cameras – public spaces / private cameras – private spaces).  I believe private cameras have the potential to be many times more effective than public cameras, but we will never know this until police modify their reporting standards to include effectiveness stats from the private sector.

Related: Police seek men after duo attacked on bus

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CNN: Baghdad surveillance crews watch helplessly as bombs explode

September 2nd, 2009 · Public Policy Failure, Public Surveillance Failure

According to CNN, 113 surveillance cameras covering 5% of Baghdad were installed to assist in "predicting terrorism". The above video shows the surveillance camera operators watching traffic and failing to identify the motives of the terrorists.  When the operators fail to predict the future, they "cringe with guilt".

The center was set up a year and a half ago, with employees on the lookout for trouble, as police officers in a back room listen to the traffic on their radios. But there are not enough cameras to cover all of Baghdad — only 5 percent of the city is surveilled under the current system.

The cameras picked up suspicious activity last Wednesday, but within 20 seconds — before any action could be taken — a truck blew up in front of the Foreign Ministry building. By day's end, bombings had killed nearly 100 people in the city.

The fledgling security surveillance operation has a long way to go, its director acknowledges. The center is understaffed and not yet open around the clock.

Though overall attacks have decreased in Iraq, the images on screen serve as undeniable evidence of the ongoing violence the Iraqi government is struggling to prevent.

That effort includes 113 security cameras placed mainly around government buildings throughout the city, though not all are functioning at any given time. Each work station at the surveillance center monitors the feeds from 10 cameras.

After last week's bombings — which made Wednesday the bloodiest day in Iraq since U.S. combat troops withdrew from Iraqi cities at the end of June — the center's managers met with Iraqi security forces in an effort to increase the number of cameras.

"We should all admit responsibility for this major breach of security," the director said. "And we have to fix the system."

For now, as the carnage fills the screen like a violent movie, employees cringe with guilt. They know that every time there is a blast on screen, it's because they were not able to prevent it.

Installing surveillance cameras and a command center in Baghdad is a logical thing to do, there is no refuting that.  However, the Baghdad security director should not be making statements correlating the ability to find terrorists on the streets and the need for more cameras.

It is illogical to assume that by installing more surveillance cameras the operators will be in a better position to identify and intervene a potential terrorist act.  It is a proven fact surveillance cameras do not deter violent crime, and conversely, public cameras are extremely poor at convicting criminals.  In this situation, the Baghdad cameras should only be used to determine if any incidents have happened, identify the magnitude of the problem, and dispatch appropriate resources.  The end result can ultimately be efficient dispatching of ambulances, and lives saved.

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West Australia's voluntary CCTV camera registration program a failure

September 2nd, 2009 · Public Policy Failure

blue-iris

Back in April, the West Australia police launched a voluntary CCTV camera registration program called Blue Iris. I thought this was a good idea, so I wrote an entry about it. It turns out the program was either not well received, or lacking communication with local businesses. According to Australian news WA Today:

WA Police have defended a CCTV project aimed at cracking down on anti-social behaviour in licensed venues despite hardly any interest in the program from clubs or pubs throughout Perth and Fremantle.

The Blue Iris CCTV Register was launched in April by Police Minister Rob Johnson, who said the program would give police access to live vision from CCTV cameras which could allow them to act faster when an incident arose and speed up the investigation process.

However, out of the dozen nightclubs and bars around Perth and Fremantle that WAtoday contacted, only one could confirm they were aware of the system after police had approached them about registering.

The Australian Hotels Association WA branch also revealed it had not been advised of the joint police and Government program.

Mr Johnson forecast in a statement on April 3 that Blue Iris – which was a voluntary register for businesses – would provide WA Police with access to "4000-6000 cameras this year alone, significantly boosting their ability to fight crime on our streets".

But with violence and other forms of anti-social behaviour escalating in entertainment hotspots around Perth – especially in Northbridge and Fremantle – the message about Blue Iris seems to have not filtered through to club and pub operators.

Patrick Murphy, of the Mustang Bar, said his business had not been approached to be on the registry.

"Under requirements of liquor licensing legislation, we are required to have a CCTV system in place, the footage of which we make available to Police and Racing, Gaming and Liquor inspectors on request," he said.

A spokesman for the Geisha Bar said "this is the first (time) Geisha Bar has ever heard of this system".

Managers and spokespeople from The Red Sea, The Deen, The Shed, The Rivervale Hotel, The Botanica, Metropolis Fremantle, The Newport and Benny's Bar said they had not heard of the Blue Iris Register, but needed to speak to colleagues to try and glean further information about it.

AHA WA spokesman Doug White said the Association has not been contacted by police about the program, and was not aware of any of its members signing up to the registry.

Mr White said he was "unsure" as to whether the Association felt this program could have an impact on clamping down on anti-social behaviour in and around clubs.

"We haven't been fully briefed on the initiative, which is kind of interesting," he said.

However, a manager from the Sapphire Bar in Subiaco acknowledged police had discussed the Blue Iris registry with him, but he confirmed his bar was not on the registry.

Since its launch in April, Michael Coe of the Office of Crime Prevention said about 100 businesses have registered with the system but he was not able to give an exact figure.

He added many local and state government agencies have yet to register, but he expected most to get on to the system in the near future.

Mr Coe said he could not say was or was not on the registry, citing confidentiality issues, but he did say registration numbers had failed to meet the expectations of police.

"We would always like more and we are working on a marketing strategy to increase the numbers," he said.

"However we are encouraged with those who are large companies and corporations who have registered as some are significant sites."

Mr Coe could not say how many crimes Blue Iris had helped solve since its inception, claiming the technology "is still relatively new and in its infancy as an operation tool for police".

"Blue Iris is an open invitation to all CCTV assets owners to register their system with police so we can map out where these systems are should police ever need to know or use," he said.

A spokesman for the Police Minister said Mr Johnson was satisfied with the overall response from local businesses to Blue Iris and he maintained pubs and clubs were not the main priority for the Register.

"While 'hot-spots' were never targeted as the prime focus for Blue Iris, there is a growing representation of all aspects of the community registered with Blue Iris," the spokesman said.

"The Office of Crime Prevention is continuously marketing Blue Iris to a broad range of organisations and agencies, and the number of registrations is increasing each week.

"(Blue Iris) enables valuable investigative time to be focused on the issue under investigation, rather than finding out who owns what CCTV equipment."

I believe West Australia is the first to implement a CCTV camera registration program (found here).  The voluntary nature of this program does not appear to be effective for various reasons.  Perhaps there was not enough budget to "raise awareness" to business owners or there was a breakdown in communication between police departments or local businesses.

Other cities considering such a program should think about making this registration process mandatory and charge a fee.  By charging a "camera registration fee", those monies can support awareness campaigns and also salaried full time employees to maintain the camera registration list.

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Glasgow plans CCTV cameras for taxis

August 25th, 2009 · Public-Private Success

Photo courtesy www.taxi-library.org

In an move that will be inevitable for taxis everywhere, the city of Glasgow is making it mandatory for all taxi cabs to have surveillance cameras.   According to The Herald:

Passengers hiring any of the 1000-plus fleet of taxis in Scotland's largest city could soon be caught on CCTV, amid concerns of potential legal action due to infringement of civil liberties and human rights.

The move, which is designed to enhance the safety of both drivers and the public, could be implemented by the end of the year and extended into the hundreds of private hire cars also operating in Glasgow.

The use of CCTV cameras and recording equipment would bring Glasgow into line with Manchester, Liverpool, Gateshead and London, as well as East Renfrewshire Council, the first authority in Scotland to permit their use.

It comes on the back of a recent survey, carried out by the Scottish Government, which found one in three taxi drivers has been assaulted at work and the case of John Worboys, the London taxi driver, recently jailed for drugging female passengers by spiking champagne and then sexually assaulting them.

The council said: "The installation of CCTV equipment in taxis and private hire cars may increase the sense of safety felt by passengers and drivers. Installation may also have a positive impact on reducing crime and antisocial behaviour. However, images captured must be stored in a way which maintains the integrity of the image.

"Protection to passengers and drivers due to the installation of CCTV cameras must be balanced against the potential infringement of civil liberties and human rights by the recording of a person's activities."

Trials in East Renfrewshire were carried out earlier this year, including one in the cab of a driver who had been the subject of a serious assault while working in January.

When a vehicle was fitted with a CCTV system, orange A5-size warning notices were fixed to the vehicle and the drivers asked to ensure that all passengers travelling in their vehicles were informed of the operation of the CCTV system.

No complaints have been received about the use of the systems and the council claims the scheme appears to have been welcomed.

But Robert Dunabie, of Glasgow TOA Taxis said: "This is an advantageous scheme for drivers and passengers. It will improve the overall feeling of security within the cab but it would have to be a system which drivers could not tamper with."

Taxi cabs are a logical place to install surveillance cameras.  As the article states, the purpose of the cameras is to keep both the driver and passenger safe from anti-social behaviour.  In the close quarters of a taxi cab, these cameras have the potential to deter bad behaviour and can provide valuable insight into certain situations.

In NYC, Mayor Bloomberg forced taxi drivers to install real-time credit card systems which also serve a second purpose – to track and record movements of taxi drivers.  In one case, a man left his violin behind, called 311, and the taxi was tracked using GPS

Because of the new Global Positioning System technology installed in cabs, customers no longer need to remember the medallion number in case they lose an object. Instead, the commission can figure out from its records which cab took the customer along a given route, Mr. Daus said.

Finding the violin took less than an hour. The cabdriver — who had gone home to New Jersey — hadn’t yet realized the instrument was in his car, said Matthew W. Daus, the chairman of the Taxi and Limousine Commission.

“We cut the driver out of the picture,” he said. “This is kind of a first in that respect.”

After taking a shower, he realized his mistake and called 311.
Finding the violin took less than an hour. The cabdriver — who had gone home to New Jersey — hadn’t yet realized the instrument was in his car, said Matthew W. Daus, the chairman of the Taxi and Limousine Commission.

These combined technologies – surveillance cameras, credit card transactions, and GPS will provide trackability and evidence in case anything bad happens during the ride.  When cities pass laws that require business owners to own and maintain surveillance cameras, the taxpayer does not usually foot the bill and is able to reap the benefits of the installation. For this reason I am a big fan of these public-private initiatives.

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UK: 1,000 public cameras to solve just one crime

August 25th, 2009 · Public Policy Failure, Public Surveillance Failure

Photo courtesy of Telegraph.co.uk

Detective Mick Neville from the Metropolitan Police is quickly becoming the face of change for public surveillance cameras.  After a report stating CCTV cameras were only effective in parking lots, Mick Neville came out and stated that the UK police are not using the technology properly. Now Mick is saying it takes 1,000 public cameras to solve just one crime.

Fewer than one crime is solved by every 1,000 closed circuit television cameras, the Metropolitan Police, Britain's biggest police force, has admitted.

Critics of Britain’s so-called 'surveillance society' said it raised serious concerns over how police forces used CCTV cameras to fight crime.

Britain is one of the most monitored countries in the world, with an estimated four million cameras nationwide.

It said: “For every 1,000 cameras in London, less than one crime is solved per year.”

The report, written by Detective Chief Inspector Mick Neville, who runs the Metropolitan Police’s Visual Images Identifications and Detections Office, found that the public “have a high expectation of CCTV and are frequently told they are captured on camera 300 times per day”.

Public confidence was dented when the police often stated there was no CCTV working when a crime has been committed, it said.

It also said that increasingly members of the public were complaining that officers had not bothered to view available CCTV images when trying to track down criminals.

It disclosed a “significant rise in the level of complaints from the public, where it is perceived that police have not viewed CCTV. This is now approaching 100 per year.”

The report found that untrained officers were often downloading and viewing CCTV images in their hunt for evidence. The cameras were effective in crime-fighting if the images and information from them was used properly.

Detective Superintendent Michael McNally, who commissioned the report, admitted there were “some concerns” about how CCTV was being used.

The report also revealed concerns at Scotland Yard that the Conservatives could cut back on numbers of cameras or the way that they are used if the party wins the next general election, likely to be next May.

Under a section headlined “Strategic Issues”, the report said: “Potential change of Government – the Conservatives are not CCTV friendly – we need to start showing that we are targeting serious crime.”

Earlier this year separate research commissioned by the Home Office suggested that the cameras had done virtually nothing to cut crime, but were most effective in preventing vehicle crimes in car parks.

A report by a House of Lords committee also said that £500million was spent on new cameras in the 10 years to 2006, money which could have been spent on street lighting or neighbourhood crime prevention initiatives.

A large proportion of the cash has been In London, where an estimated £200 million so far has been spent on the cameras. This suggests that each crime has cost £20,000 to detect.

Britain has 1 per cent of the world’s population but around 20 per cent of its CCTV cameras – which works out as the equivalent of one for every 14 people

David Davis MP, the former shadow Home Secretary, said the latest report “should provoke a major and long overdue rethink on where the Home Office crime prevention budget is being spent”.

He added: “CCTV leads to massive expense and minimum effectiveness. It creates a huge intrusion on privacy, yet provides little or no improvement in security.

“The Metropolitan Police has been extraordinarily slow to act to deal with the ineffectiveness of CCTV, something true both in London and across the country.

“A combination of overdependence on CCTV and ineffective use of the cameras means that this money could have been much better spent on more police officers."

Chris Grayling, the shadow Home Secretary, said: "It's just not possible to fight crime with technology alone, CCTV can help in some situations but there is nothing to beat getting more police back from behind their desks and on to the streets."

“There is no evidence that it saves us from gun or knife crime, or for that matter that it stops terrorists – many terrorists are only too glad to advertise their evil deeds.

Nor are cameras much good in getting convictions. Evidence from them is only allowed in court if the images are securely stored and handled, so that there is no possibility that they have been tampered with.”

The National Police Improvement Agency is currently undertaking a review into the effectiveness of CCTV.

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said the CCTV detection rate was based on "an estimate only and based on a small sample".

She added: "They do not reflect the complete picture of cases resolved in London in which CCTV evidence is an important factor."

Mick Neville sure said a mouthful.  I agree with a lot of Mike's statements but think that there is only room for improvement when the prognosis is "poor".  The UK embraced CCTV technologies a decade ago, there is no doubt that the camera technologies could be brought up to date, practices improved, and installation contexts revisited.

It's interesting to hear Mike admit the anti-deterring-terrorism sentiments when American politicians have taken the opposite stance. NYPD politicians are selling the lower and midtown Manhattan security initiatives as a way to deter terrorism. I think it's obvious who is correct.

Related: CCTV cameras: If they do not stop crime or catch criminals, what are they for?
Related: Surveillance crews watch helplessly as bombs explode

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Armored truck loaded with cameras runs bad neighbors out of town

August 17th, 2009 · Public Surveillance Leading Practice

Carrie Porter from The Wall Street Journal is reporting how Peoria Illinois deals with rowdy citizens and drug dealers:  shame them with a armored vehicle loaded with cameras.

Police here call it the Armadillo. They say it has restored quiet to some formerly rowdy streets. Neighbors' calls for help have dropped sharply. About half of the truck's targets have fled the neighborhood.

"The truck is meant to be obnoxious and to cause shame," says Peoria Police Chief Steven Settingsgaard.

The Armadillo has helped alleviate problems like drug dealing that can make neighborhoods unlivable.
That weekend, the truck pulled up to the offending neighbor's house. A police officer knocked on the door and told the residents a nuisance report had been filed. Within 24 hours, the Smiths say, the house was quiet. The occupants moved out soon thereafter.

"The difference was like night and day," Mrs. Smith says. The landlord, Phil Schertz, credits the Armadillo.

"The ugliness of the Armadillo is what makes it unique," says Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police. "A police car is not a particular stigma, but if people see that thing in front of your house, they know something bad is going on in there."

Peoria police acknowledge that the truck sometimes just shifts crime from one area to another. But it can disrupt illegal activities temporarily. Citizens appear to like the idea, and police say they have a four-week waiting list of requests for the Armadillo.

In the summer of 2006, police were brainstorming ways to rattle a suspected drug dealer. They had exhausted traditional strategies, including undercover operations, and were left empty-handed and frustrated. They decided to park a retired police car in front of the suspect's house.

About 24 hours after the car had been put in place, all its windows had been smashed, the tires were flat and the body was dented.

"It was embarrassing to tow a police car," Chief Settingsgaard says. "But I saw it as a success because it was proof how much [the dealer] really disliked the police car's presence."

The dealer left the neighborhood soon after the incident; he was later arrested and convicted on a gun charge.

A Peoria tire company installed foam-filled tires that can't go flat. Decals that say "PEORIA POLICE Nuisance Property Surveillance Vehicle" were pasted on all four sides of the white truck.

There were some bumps along the road. When Officer Elizabeth Hermacinski, 39, the force's nuisance-abatement officer and Armadillo driver, took the behemoth out for its first deployment in July 2008, the targeted troublemakers seemed to have gotten wind of the plan. In any case, they had parked cars in every available spot in front of the house.

So Ms. Hermacinski parked across the street, close enough to get the message across. "It's psychological warfare," she says.

The Armadillo is the opposite of an undercover operation. Its goal isn't making arrests, but alerting suspects that police are on to them, police say. The surveillance footage is rarely reviewed by the police and is saved for just a short time before it is erased. Still, the unit can have a significant impact.

The Peoria Police have performed value-camera-engineering at it's finest.  The whole point of this truck is to "fix" problem situations, and it is working like a charm.  Operation "embarrasment truck" is a pretty slick idea and I think there is a good future in this tactic as long as communities remain aware of the displacement issue.

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UK Police launch "flying saucer" surveillance camera

August 17th, 2009 · No Verdict

flying-saucer-surveillance cameraThe UK Police have created a remote control surveillance camera which has been dubbed a flying saucer.  According to the Daily Telegraph:

Similar to a mini-helicopter, the device has four pairs of carbon-fibre rotor blades which support a camera. An operator on the ground controls the vehicle's flight using a hand-held control panel with two joysticks.
The drone – which is based on military Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) technology – feeds live images back to a screen on the control unit, enabling the "pilot" to operate the machine even when it is out of his or her sight.
Merseyside Police was the first force to use the drones, launching them during a number of crackdowns on gun and gang crime, as well as against anti-social behaviour. The aerial cameras have also previously been deployed to deter crime at pop festivals. Yesterday was the first time it was used at a demonstration
"The drone, fitted with CCTV cameras, will be used by a trained operator from the manufacturing company. It will record any incidents of disorder for evidence-gathering purposes. The drone is similar to a small, model aircraft."
The drone is about three feet in diameter and can be configured to gather still images, video, thermal images and night-vision pictures. Unlike full-scale police helicopters it is virtually inaudible.

Similar to a mini-helicopter, the device has four pairs of carbon-fibre rotor blades which support a camera. An operator on the ground controls the vehicle's flight using a hand-held control panel with two joysticks.

The drone – which is based on military Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) technology – feeds live images back to a screen on the control unit, enabling the "pilot" to operate the machine even when it is out of his or her sight.

Merseyside Police was the first force to use the drones, launching them during a number of crackdowns on gun and gang crime, as well as against anti-social behaviour. The aerial cameras have also previously been deployed to deter crime at pop festivals. Yesterday was the first time it was used at a demonstration

"The drone, fitted with CCTV cameras, will be used by a trained operator from the manufacturing company. It will record any incidents of disorder for evidence-gathering purposes. The drone is similar to a small, model aircraft."

The drone is about three feet in diameter and can be configured to gather still images, video, thermal images and night-vision pictures. Unlike full-scale police helicopters it is virtually inaudible.

There seems to be a lot of these airborn cameras going up lately.  The US recently launched a powerful camera mounted to a hot air ballon near our northern border.  While this "border camera" did not get much press in the states, our neighbors to the north told us exactly how they felt about it – they pulled their pants down and  mooned it.

60 Minutes recently ran a story on unmanned drone camera planes in Iraq and the Army deemed them "highly effective".  In Lancaster PA, which proclaims itself the "most watched city in America" is also creating an eye in the sky program.  Lancaster will mount a surveillance camera to an airplane circling the community 24 hours a day in an effort to "combat crime".

Whether these cameras are effective, or just capturing some Canadian bacon remains to be seen.  I think it's obvious that aerial cameras deployed for a specific reason have the potential to be more effective than just for "general surveillance".

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