Feral Jundi

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

PMC 2.0: Armchair Deputies Patrol U.S. Border

   I posted a deal about this awhile back, and it is cool to finally get some statistics about the program.  I thought it was an awesome idea back then, and I still think it is good idea and deserves further study and use.

   Now some of you are probably wondering why this isn’t under law enforcement or technology?  I put it under PMC 2.0 because I think the lessons learned with this virtual border watch program, could easily be applied to other countries and border security contracts.  Especially countries where border control is a matter of life and death, where terrorists are looking to import their hate.

   Look at the Afghanistan and Pakistan border, or the Iraq borders, or the Saudi Arabia and Yemen border?  Crowd sourcing a border watch program could very well be the trend of future border security operations.  It also involves that Grandma in Michigan, if in fact she wanted to make  a difference in the war effort or with border enforcement here in the US. It is like a modern day version of the coastal lookouts that civilians participated in back during World War Two.

   By the way, these guys should turn this into a mobile application for smart phones, and make this something people can do while waiting in the doctor’s office before an appointment.  That would really increase the numbers if you know what I mean.-Matt

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Armchair deputies patrol US border

December 26, 2009

By Claire Prentice

When John Spears gets home from his sales job in New York, he sits down at his computer with a bottle of beer and starts patrolling the US border.

And to do it, he does not need to stir from his sofa.

He is one of tens of thousands of people around the world who are volunteering to patrol the 1250-mile long (2000 km) stretch between Texas and Mexico via the web.

The controversial $4m (£2.5m) Texas Virtual Border Watch Programme invites civilians to log on to Blueservo.net.

There they can monitor live feeds 24/7 from 21 hidden surveillance cameras placed at intervals along the border.

Supporters see the initiative as a step forward in US efforts to curb illegal immigration, drug smuggling and border violence.

Critics say it is encouraging vigilantism and stoking anti-immigrant feeling.

Value for money?

Since the site went live in November 2008, it has received more than 50 million hits, and more than 130,000 people have registered to become ” virtual deputies”. They are located as far afield as Australia, Mexico, Colombia, Israel, New Zealand and the UK.

“ Having those extra pairs of eyes makes a big difference ”

Don Reay, Texas Border Sheriff’s Coalition

The increased focus on the border comes amid concerns that drug-related violence is spilling over from Mexico into the US.

So far, some 21 arrests have been made under the programme which is operated by the Texas Border Sheriff’s Coalition (TBSC). The majority were for drug smuggling, leading to the seizure of 4,720lbs (2,140kg) of marijuana.

Critics say this does not represent value for money. State Senator Eliot Shapleigh, a Democrat from El Paso, described the scheme as a waste of money.

He argues that border cameras will “invite extremists to participate in a virtual immigrant hunt”.

The Bush administration tried to curb illegal immigration and drug smuggling by erecting a wall along parts of the US-Mexico border.

The surveillance cameras are focused on those stretches not protected by the wall or border guards.

Controversial measure

The website tells users what to look for: groups crowded into boats trying to cross the Rio Grande, individuals carrying backpacks or packages, cars parked in isolated areas and people crawling through the undergrowth.

“ I get a kick out of playing border guard – it’s more interesting than TV ”

John Spears, virtual deputy

If the virtual deputies spot anything suspicious, they click a button on the website and send a message to the sheriff’s office in the corresponding location.

The sheriff’s office will then decide whether to investigate or to refer the sighting to the US Border Patrol.

“Having those extra pairs of eyes makes a big difference,” says TBSC executive director Don Reay. “If we can prevent crime by our mere presence then that is a very good thing.”

The scheme has drawn criticism from politicians and civil liberties groups, who say patrolling the border is the responsibility of the US government, not volunteer citizens.

Federal backing

Jay Stanley of the American Civil Liberties Union says that while it is “legitimate to protect the country’s border, we would be concerned that the cameras might encourage vigilantism. That people would think they saw an illegal immigrant and then jump in their truck with a gun.”

But the administrators of the site maintain the primary goal of the initiative is to tackle crime, not illegal immigration.

The criminal justice office of Texas Governor Rick Perry awarded the programme $2m in federal funds in its first year and has provided an additional $2m to fund another year. More cameras will also be added in the months ahead.

Governor Perry has been criticised locally for pandering to the right-wing fringes of the Republican Party, and the scheme has been mocked on national television. Governor Perry’s office did not return calls for comment.

Fred Burton, vice president of intelligence at the global intelligence company Stratfor, says cameras are not the solution for the border, but that they are a tool.

According to the TBSC, the surveillance cameras act as a powerful deterrent to potential drug traffickers and illegal immigrants.

Mr Reay says that it is “impossible to quantify how much criminal activity we are deterring but we’ve seen a high volume of ‘turn-backs’, where people come right up to the border then turn around again.”

Like real police work, online border patrolling seems to consist of hours of tedium punctuated by minutes of high excitement.

Despite this, Deanna Blythe spends about an hour a day logged on the site. The housewife from Athens, Ohio, says that it gives her a feeling of doing her civic duty and helping to keep the borders secure.

Virtual deputy John Spears says it is more than that. He actually gets “a kick out of coming home from a day in the office and playing border guard. It’s more interesting than TV”.

Story here.

 

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