Body Cameras Used By UK Local Government To Catch People Dropping Litter And Walking Dogs

from the illegal-pigeon-feeders-beware dept

We’ve just written about the use of body cameras in UK schools. One reason these trials are taking place is probably because the technology is now relatively cheap, which lowers previous barriers to deploying it. So it should perhaps come as no surprise to learn from a new report from Big Brother Watch that body cameras are also widely used by UK local government departments (pdf). Here are some of the figures Big Brother Watch gathered using Freedom of Information requests to over 400 UK councils:

54% of all local [government] authorities across the UK are equipping members of staff or contractors with body worn cameras at a cost of ?1,791,960.81 [about $2.2 million].

66% of local authorities are failing to completing Privacy Impact Assessments (PIAs) before deploying the technology and

21% of councils are holding non-evidential footage for longer than 31 days; the time limit adhered to by police forces.

The report has details about how many body cameras each local authority has — one in London has 202 — how much has been spent, and with which suppliers. It also offers some information about the kind of uses to which the cameras are being put:

the decision by some councils to equip staff with the cameras in order to film people dropping litter, walking dogs, parking or to monitor people’s recycling, in order to use the “evidence” to issue a fine, we would argue is a disproportionate use of an intrusive surveillance capability and a potential breach of the privacy of law abiding citizens.

Many local government officials would doubtless disagree. After all, we know that UK councils are using highly-intrusive surveillance powers supposedly needed to fight terrorism in order to spy on excessively barking dogs and illegal pigeon feeding. It’s a natural, if worrying, extension of that approach to start using body cameras for similarly trivial purposes.

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Comments on “Body Cameras Used By UK Local Government To Catch People Dropping Litter And Walking Dogs”

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36 Comments
That Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

Well its worked so well fixing everything else, we can just keep deploying it for all of the ills of society.

The only rights you have are the ones they allow, and if they can’t be bothered to make sure they aren’t breaking the law why should you care.

How long until they use the CIA’s code to give everyone a free tv preloaded with spyware so they can monitor better inside homes and transmit important messages to the people. It would make it easier to spread word of our great victory in Eastasia.

Richard (profile) says:

The same Local Authorities

Are these the same local authorities who are compalining that they cannot afford to provide proper care for the elderly and disabled – yet they can splash out £2M for this.
Seems to me that the moment a sexy new technology for controlling people is on the agenda all the talk of spending constraints and “living within our means” goes out of the window.

Michael (profile) says:

“the decision by some councils to equip staff with the cameras in order to film people dropping litter, walking dogs, parking or to monitor people’s recycling, in order to use the “evidence” to issue a fine, we would argue is a disproportionate use of an intrusive surveillance capability and a potential breach of the privacy of law abiding citizens”

I’m not seeing the problem. These are body-worn cameras. So, it can be assumed, there is a person wearing this camera. Having recorded footage to go with their eye-witness testimony relating to a fine sounds great to me. We now have some additional evidence to go along with their word that someone needed to be issued a fine.

Nothing indicates that the cameras are somehow going where these agents have not been going in the past. The people being filmed are in public places or at least places in which the agents are allowed/able to go (and if this is not the case, we have the agent recorded doing something illegal).

The only issues I really see here are a failure to complete the privacy impact (is there a law requiring this?) and holding the footage longer than the police do. The second item only seems like an issue if the police are limited to 31 days by law – if not, someone should propose a law to limit the time footage may be kept by authorities.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Exactly. You can’t have it both ways. You can’t demand every aspect of a cop’s daily job be recorded for later possible scrutiny, then turn around and tell him to ignore something that is in violation of the laws of the community. These are people in public places breaking the law.

So what’s the deal? TD has multiple articles denigrating the authorities and their perceived over zealous actions, and waxing about how NOT dangerous their jobs are, but when they are equipped with cameras to ensure they don’t overstep their authority, we get an article about how stupid they are for doing their job correctly and enforcing laws.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Here’s an example of where they draw the line … oh wait – no it’s not. They have no boundaries, they just want you to think they do – lol …. suckerz

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/3507238/Social-services-set-up-CCTV-camera-in-couples-bedroom.html

http://www.express.co.uk/comment/expresscomment/562833/Sir-Bernard-Hogan-Howw-CCTV-camera-homes

JoeCool (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Here’s the problem:

Group of low-level flunkies are going through every frame of video looking for fineable offenses.

Someone from major crimes division is in the background trying to get someone to notice him. “Hey! When can we get some of that footage? We need to see if there’s any video of the robbery.”

Boss steps up to him. “Quit wasting their time! No one cares about the robbery – everything was insured. They need to make their budget quota for next month or we don’t get the bonus, and damned if our Christmas party won’t be the biggest and best in the region!”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

You can’t demand every aspect of a cop’s daily job be recorded for later possible scrutiny, then turn around and tell him to ignore something that is in violation of the laws of the community. These are people in public places breaking the law.

If I got a fine for littering, I’d want there to be some evidence. If that’s all this is–extra evidence for a ticket that was going to be written anyway–it’s not a problem. I’d be annoyed if they were using it for mass surveillance, e.g., uploading the footage somewhere, running algorithms to catch littering etc. in the background of every scene filmed, and mailing tickets after the fact.

JoeCool (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

If I had to guess, this is an effort to force police to write more tickets to bring in more revenue. The shift supervisor will go over the officer’s body cam footage and match violations seen on-camera against the officer’s ticket book. Missing citations will result in a warning to the officer, depending on how often they miss offenses. No more leniency on the offenders!

Cowardly Lion says:

Re: Re: Re:

“These are people in public places breaking the law.”

And if the law was that clear cut we wouldn’t need judges. You clearly didn’t hear the one about this orange-peel spraying evil-doer:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/11720952/Council-loses-nine-month-legal-battle-with-man-who-accidentally-dropped-a-piece-of-orange-peel.html

or this, the old lady pensioner lint chucking terrormonger:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2108777/Grandmother-fined-75-littering-dropping-strand-cotton-gloves.html

If the money raised from these fines went directly to an independent charity like Trees for Cities, or WWF, this nonsense would dry up overnight.

Cowardly Lion says:

Re: Re:

Well, for starters you could see it as the thin end of a wedge, and something that’s clearly not been thought through.

These camera-wielding people are NOT police officers. They are local authority staff, or contractors even. So what happens if it’s a child out walking a dog (and what the hell exactly’s wrong with walking a dog for Christ’s sake). There’s been zero public debate about how far monitoring, or recording, or following, or contact between these pseudo-officials and children can go, if at all.

It’s nonsense that’s going to end in a shit-storm, right before someone with an inkling of sense says “well, that was probably not a good idea” and dials the whole thing back.

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