In testimony before a U.S. Senate panel this week, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said northern border surveillance using unmanned aerial aircraft now expands from North Dakota to eastern Washington.
Since 2005, the Department of Homeland Security has deployed a handful of drones around the country, with some based in Arizona, Florida, North Dakota and Texas – with more planned for the future. Operations out of North Dakota first began in 2011.
The two 10,000-pound Predator-B unmanned aircrafts based in Grand Forks, N.D., have a 950-mile coverage range and "they do enter Washington airspace, in the vicinity of Spokane," said Customs and Border Protection spokeswoman Gina Gray on Thursday.
The unmanned aircrafts "can stay in the air for up to 20 hours at a time, something no other aircraft in the federal inventory can do," Gray said. "In this manner it is a force multiplier, providing aerial surveillance support for border agents by investigating sensor activity in remote areas to distinguish between real or perceived threats, allowing the boots on the ground force to best allocate their resources and efforts."
Since 2005, the Department of Homeland Security has deployed a handful of drones around the country, with some based in Arizona, Florida, North Dakota, and Texas -- with more planned for the future. Operations out of North Dakota first began in 2011.
The use of drones has proliferated among federal and local law enforcement agencies nationwide along with civilian hobbyists in recent years.
A recent American Civil Liberties Union report said allowing drones greater access takes the country "a large step closer to a surveillance society in which our every move is monitored, tracked, recorded, and scrutinized by the authorities."
http://www.komonews.com/news/local/Homeland-Security-drones-patrol-Washington-BC-border--149356585.html
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2012/apr/30/drones-patrolling-washington-border/
Military-style drones on 63 military bases in the U.S.
More worrying to Americans should be a report saying
that there are already 63 drone bases inside the United
States.
The Washington
Post reports, “Big things can happen in Congress — as long as no one is
watching.
“Lobbying records released last week show that there wasn’t much opposition this winter when Congress quietly opened up U.S. airspace to aerial drones, which some advocates for civil liberties say raise a host of concerns about privacy.
“Lobbying records released last week show that there wasn’t much opposition this winter when Congress quietly opened up U.S. airspace to aerial drones, which some advocates for civil liberties say raise a host of concerns about privacy.
Drone technology, advanced by the
military for surveillance and elimination of terrorists in war zones, is set to
come back to the home front in a big way in coming years, with possible uses for
law enforcement, first responders, and agriculture and environmental
monitoring.
Select companies and ask local governments around the country already
for permission
to test drones, which can sometimes stay aloft for days at a time at a fraction of
the cost of helicopters and airplanes.”
Recently, Alexander Higgins.com reported:
“A lawsuit has forced the FAA to reveal
the location of 63 Secret Drone bases located inside the United States some of
which will be the starting point for more drone
warfare.
While the information released shows an
alarming number of bases being used for military and local law enforcement
drones, perhaps the most startling revelation is that the United States is
allowing Canadian Border Patrol Drones to operate across the Canadian
border.
Odds are that the are many more drone
bases inside the United States whose locations have been kept secret for various
national security reasons and the lawsuit only forced the government to release
the names and locations of permmitted US drone
operators.
That means that the type of drones – be
they for targeted killing, guiding missiles, or general surveillance – and the
number of drones at each location still remains a secret although the FAA says
they plan on releasing such information at a later
date.”
England’s Daily Mail has more
information:
“Most of the active drones are deployed
from military installations, enforcement agencies and border patrol teams
according to the Federal Aviation Authority.
Update May 15, 2012:
FAA to ease rules for police agencies to fly unmanned drones.
Los Angeles, CA - Surveillance aircraft used by the U.S. military overseas could soon be coming to the skies above Los Angeles County.
KNX 1070′s Charles Feldman reports the Federal Aviation Administration is making it easier for local law enforcement agencies to fly unmanned drones.
The FAA has streamlined the process that would allow agencies to fly smaller, unarmed versions of the drones that hunt down terrorists in places such as Pakistan and Afghanistan.
http://www.faa.gov/news/updates/?newsId=68004
While the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has not yet applied for an application to fly drones over our skies, its Homeland Security chief Bob Osborne said drones could be in the department’s future — with some caveats.
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012/05/15/faa-to-ease-rules-for-police-agencies-to-fly-unmanned-drones/
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