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New NYPD Drone Policy Represents a Serious Threat to Privacy

Camera Drone
Camera Drone
Michael Sisitzky,
Lead Policy Counsel,
New York Civil Liberties Union
Simon McCormack,
Staff Writer,
New York Civil Liberties Union; Contributing Writer, Speak Freely
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December 7, 2018

The New York Police Department that it will deploy 14 new drones as part of its policing activities across New York City. The use of this highly invasive technology represents a new frontier for both public safety and abuses of power.

The department did reach out to the NYCLU to ask us for input on a draft of the policy governing the use of its drones. But while the department did make some changes based on our recommendations, we remain deeply concerned about the policy鈥檚 serious shortcomings.

First, it鈥檚 important to understand just how powerful drones are. The NYPD鈥檚 drones are outfitted with cameras equipped with sophisticated technology and 4K resolution. The mere presence of these police cameras can create a chilling effect on people exercising their rights to free speech, protest, and other lawful activities.

Because they are so small, nimble, and relatively inexpensive, drones are in many surveillance tools than, say, police helicopters. Mass-deploying helicopters is prohibitively expensive, but regularly using drones is much more feasible. And, because they are small, they can fly in places helicopters can鈥檛 reach, like into a person鈥檚 garage or just outside a bedroom window.

Given how easy drones make surveillance and the NYPD's troubling history of unlawful spying, it鈥檚 critical that the policies that govern their use put strict limits on when and where they can be deployed.

The department鈥檚 policy allows drones to be used to monitor vehicle traffic and pedestrian congestion at large scale events as well as rooftop security observation at shootings or 鈥渓arge scale events.鈥 But the policy does not clearly define what a 鈥渓arge scale event鈥 is. The department mentioned the Women鈥檚 March and Times Square New Year鈥檚 Eve celebrations, but it鈥檚 unclear what smaller events could trigger the use of drones.

One of our biggest fears is that these devices could be used to spy on protesters legally exercising their constitutional rights. The NYPD鈥檚 policy does little to quell our concerns.

The policy also allows the NYPD鈥檚 chief of department to approve requests from officers to use drones for 鈥減ublic safety or emergency situations.鈥 What constitutes public safety or emergency situations remains undefined, leaving wide open the possibility that those terms will be applied to a broad range of instances. We told the department that it should better define these terms, but our recommendation went unheeded in the final policy.

One bit of good news in the policy is that it specifically forbids equipping the drones with facial recognition technology. But this good news is tempered by the fact that the policy does not forbid the department from going back and using this technology on the footage captured by the drones鈥 cameras.

Facial recognition technology is incredibly invasive and , especially when trying to identify young people and people of color. Its use on drone footage, which could potentially capture the movements of hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers, poses a severe privacy risk.

We raised our concerns with the NYPD, and the department did end up including a prohibition on using face surveillance on drone footage. But the final policy includes a loophole for this ban in the case of a 鈥減ublic safety concern.鈥 Once again, this term is undefined and could potentially create an exception so big it swallows the rule.

Finally, we recommended that the NYPD only keep footage captured by drones for 24 hours, absent specific, well-defined reasons for holding on to it for longer. The longer the NYPD keeps the footage, and the more footage there is, the greater the chances are that it will be misused.

The NYPD鈥檚 final policy says footage will be kept for 30 days, but it also includes some specific 鈥 and one very non-specific 鈥 examples of when retention would be extended beyond that limit. The retention period can be extended 鈥渋f the images are needed for civil litigation, subpoena production, FOIL requests or other legal process.鈥 While 鈥渙ther legal process鈥 is undefined and could constitute another troubling loophole, the other scenarios track with our recommendations.

Overall, the NYPD鈥檚 drone policy places no meaningful restrictions on police deployment of drones in New York City and opens the door to the police department building a permanent archive of drone footage of political activity and intimate private behavior visible only from the sky. While we appreciate the NYPD鈥檚 willingness to meet with us before it announced this program, the department should have done more to engage directly with the communities most likely to be impacted by this new technology.

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