DHS to test spy drones for ‘public safety’ applications

truther October 11, 2012 1

The Department of Homeland Security has announced in a solicitation to drone manufacturers that it will begin testing “Robotic Aircraft for Public Safety” at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, indicating that small spy drones will be used to keep tabs on Americans in the near future.

As Infowars reported back in July, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano told a House Committee on Homeland Security that the federal agency was “looking at drones that could be utilized to give us situational awareness in a large public safety [matter] or disaster.”

 

This represented an about-face of sorts for the agency, which had previously been reticent about the idea of using surveillance drones to spy on the public.

 

However, a recent solicitation posted on the FedBizOpps website confirms that the DHS is launching its Robotic Aircraft for Public Safety (RAPS) project and is asking small unmanned aerial systems (SUAS) vendors to take part.

 

The drones are set to be used for applications such as “law enforcement operations, search and rescue, and fire and hazardous material spill response” and will fly for 30 minutes to two hours at a time, weighing around 25 pounds so they can be launched by hand.

 

“DHS’ second thoughts on drones may not be so surprising,” reports Wired News. “In recent years, DHS has gotten interested in vastly expanding its surveillance capabilities, exploring cameras reminiscent of military ones that can spy on four square miles at once.”

 

As we reported earlier this year, the DHS is already using another type of airborne drone surveillance, also utilized to track insurgents in Afghanistan and Iraq, for the purposes of “emergency and non-emergency incidents” within the United States.

 

A bill passed by Congress in February paves the way for the use of surveillance drones in U.S. skies on a widespread basis. The FAA predicts that by 2020 there could be up to 30,000 drones in operation nationwide.

 

U.S. law enforcement bodies are already using drone technology to spy on Americans. In December last year, a Predator B drone was called in to conduct surveillance over a family farm in North Dakota as part of a SWAT raid on the Brossart family, who were suspects in the egregious crime of stealing six missing cows. Local police in this one area have already used the drone on two dozen occasions since June last year.

 

Police departments are also attempting to get approval to use surveillance blimps that sit over cities and watch for “suspicious activity.”

 

The U.S. Army recently tested a football field-sized blimp over the city of New Jersey. The blimp can fly for a period of 21 hours and “is equipped with high-tech sensors that can monitor insurgents from above.” Prison Planet

FACTS & FIGURES

 

More than a third of Americans worry their privacy will suffer if drones become the latest police tool for tracking suspected criminals at home, according to an Associated Press-National Constitution Center poll. AP

 

Congress has directed the Federal Aviation Administration to come up with safety regulations that will clear the way for routine domestic use of unmanned aircraft within the next three years. AP

 

The U.S. government has announced that 30,000 drones would be spying on Americans domestically. CBS

 

The CIA and the U.S. military have used unmanned aerial vehicles known as drones to target and kill those Washington calls “suspected militants” in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Somalia and Libya.

 

The United States was identified in June 2010 as the world’s No. 1 user of targeted killings — largely as a result of its dependence on unmanned drone attacks. CNN

 

In Pakistan alone, U.S. drone have killed at least 2,800 civilians have since 2004.

Source

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One Comment »

  1. common law p.a.g. Chris October 11, 2012 at 11:56 pm - Reply

    Public Safety Humpf? A mere pretense to subvert and Undermine Rights to Privacy by Arial Invasion of privacy absent Warrant predicated on Probable Cause founded on tests of reasonability offered to obtain Warrants necessitated by determinant Affadavit under oath to pains and penalties for Perjury. See Katz v. Curtledge? can you spell SKEET?

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