For those one or two of you who thought we still had some privacy and freedom left under the bush Police State this should clear things up.

The 'Real ID' Act which goes into affect next year will help to ensure that we ALL follow the rules of The State. "Papers Please?"...OR ELSE!!


Domestic Use Of Spy Satellites To Widen
Law Enforcement Getting New Access To Secret Imagery

By:
Joby Warrick
The Washington Post
Updated:
16.AUGUST.2007.0016.CDT

WASHINGTON.D.C.
WASHINGTON POST

The Bush administration has approved a plan to expand domestic access to some of the most powerful tools of 21st-century spycraft, giving law enforcement officials and others the ability to view data obtained from satellite and aircraft sensors that can see through cloud cover and even penetrate buildings and underground bunkers.

A program approved by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the Department of Homeland Security will allow broader domestic use of secret overhead imagery beginning as early as this fall, with the expectation that state and local law enforcement officials will eventually be able to tap into technology once largely restricted to foreign surveillance.

Administration officials say the program will give domestic security and emergency preparedness agencies new capabilities in dealing with a range of threats, from illegal immigration and terrorism to hurricanes and forest fires. But the program, described yesterday by the Wall Street Journal, quickly provoked opposition from civil liberties advocates, who said the government is crossing a well-established line against the use of military assets in domestic law enforcement.

Although the federal government has long permitted the use of spy-satellite imagery for certain scientific functions -- such as creating topographic maps or monitoring volcanic activity -- the administration's decision would provide domestic authorities with unprecedented access to high-resolution, real-time satellite photos.

‘More Robust Access’

They could also have access to much more. A statement issued yesterday by the Department of Homeland Security said that officials envision "more robust access" not only to imagery but also to "the collection, analysis and production skills and capabilities of the intelligence community."

The beneficiaries may include "federal, state, local and tribal elements" involved in emergency preparedness and response or "enforcement of criminal and civil laws." The "tribal" reference was to Native Americans who conduct semiautonomous law enforcement operations on reservations.

"These systems are already used to help us respond to crises," Charles Allen, the chief intelligence officer for the Department of Homeland Security, said in a telephone interview. "We anticipate that we can also use it to protect Americans by preventing the entry of dangerous people and goods into the country, and by helping us examine critical infrastructure for vulnerabilities."

Domestic security officials already have access to commercial satellite imagery, including the high-definition photographs available from Google and other private vendors. But spy satellites offer much greater resolution and provide images in real time, said Jeffrey T. Richelson, an expert on space-based surveillance and a senior fellow with the National Security Archive in Washington.

"You also can get more coverage more often," Richelson said. "These satellites will cover during the course of their orbits the entire United States. They will be operating 24 hours a day and using infrared cameras at night."

Other nonvisual capabilities can be provided by Aircraft-Based Sensors, which include ground-penetrating radar and highly sensitive detectors that can sense electromagnetic activity, radioactivity or traces of chemicals, military experts said. Such radar can be used to find objects hidden in buildings or bunkers.

One possible use of the technology would be to spot staging areas along smuggling routes used to transport narcotics or illegal immigrants, officials said. In a handful of cases, security officials have requested -- and obtained -- similar help, but only on a case-by-case basis.

Allen said the agreement with the DNI grew out of the general impetus for wider intelligence-sharing in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, when administration and intelligence officials began examining the possibility of increasing officials' access to secret data as a means of strengthening the nation's defenses.

The program was formally authorized in May in a memo by Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. The two officials have been coordinating for months, as recommended in a 2005 study headed by Keith Hall, then the director of the National Reconnaissance Office.

Hall's group cited an "urgent need" for expanding sharing of remote sensing data to domestic groups other than scientific researchers. "Opportunities to better protect the nation are being missed," the report said.

Under the new program, the DHS will create a subordinate agency to be known as the National Applications Office. The new office, which has gained the backing of congressional intelligence and appropriations committees, is responsible for coordinating requests for access to intelligence by civilian agencies. Previously, an agency known as the Civilian Applications Committee facilitated access to satellite imagery for geologic study.

‘Big Brother In The Sky’

Oversight of the department's use of the overhead imagery data would come from officials in the Department of Homeland Security and from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and would consist of reviews by agency inspectors general, lawyers and privacy officers. "We can give total assurance" that Americans' civil liberties will be protected, Allen said. "Americans shouldn't have any concerns about it."

But civil liberties groups quickly condemned the move, which Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security Studies, a nonprofit activist group, likened to "Big Brother in the sky." "They want to turn these enormous spy capabilities, built to be used against overseas enemies, onto Americans," Martin said. "THEY ARE LAYING THE BRICKS ONE AT A TIME FOR A POLICE STATE."

Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy for the Federation of American Scientists, said that the data could be useful but that oversight for the program was woefully inadequate. Enhanced access "shouldn't be adopted at all costs because it comes with risk to privacy and to the integrity of our political institutions," he said.

URL:
www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20290145/

© 2007 The Washington Post Company
© 2007 MSNBC.com
posted by:
Bob
offline Bob
Texas
  • Re: BUSH TO USE SPY SATELLITES ON AMERICANS

    Fri, August 17, 2007 - 6:49 PM
    Hi Bob!! :)

    From the article:

    "Other nonvisual capabilities can be provided by Aircraft-Based Sensors, which include ground-penetrating radar and highly sensitive detectors that can sense electromagnetic activity, radioactivity or traces of chemicals, military experts said. Such radar can be used to find objects hidden in buildings or bunkers."

    I'm wondering how this will fly even in a public space. The Supreme Court in the Kyllo case ruled that the use of thermal imaging to measure excess heat of a private residence was a search of that residence and therefore needed probable cause and a search warrant. At issue was a resident who had an indoor grow operation going on. The police drove by, used their handy dandy thermal imaging device and measured excess heat that was over the norm.

    If these spy satellites are used on Americans, I'm sure we'll see more litigation on the issue.
    • Re: BUSH TO USE SPY SATELLITES ON AMERICANS

      Sun, August 19, 2007 - 11:19 PM
      Hey Deborah:

      I've lost most of my faith in the new Republican Supreme Court since it appears they are less interested in protecting our rights and more interested in doing what bush says.
      It seems like we don't have any governmental group we can rely on to try to stop the bush effort to turn the U.S. into a Police State.
      Even the Democrats in Congress are kow towing to him.
      I was glad to see that Pelosi is being challenged. She definitely does not have the interests of the people in mind as she continues to support bush and refuses to start impeachment proceedings against him.
      I don't know what bothers me the most , the impression that the American People are that trusting of our government or that it makes no difference what we think we can't change the way the country is going.
      The fact that bush is being so blatant about dissolving our rights only shows that he feels he has nothing to fear from the American People.
      So far we have only proved him right in that assumption.
      • Re: BUSH TO USE SPY SATELLITES ON AMERICANS

        Sun, August 19, 2007 - 11:35 PM
        The only reason I'm holding out some hope (because of Kyllo) is because it was a right-leaning case. Scalia said (in dicta) that thermal imaging devices may be allowable once the public has ready access to them, but right now, because they are fairly strictly only used by law enforcement and the military, they can't be used on private residences.

        How long will Kyllo hold up? Maybe 5 to 10 years? Maybe during that time, we'll see some kind of shift to the left.

        And yeah, I agree, much as I have liked Pelosi in the past, I'm glad she's being challenged. The democrats caving the way they have is obscene.
        • Re: BUSH TO USE SPY SATELLITES ON AMERICANS

          Wed, August 22, 2007 - 12:00 AM
          Hey Deborah:
          I agree whole heartedly with you and hope that you are right.
          I just can't believe how badly the Dems have caved in to bush and although I hope I am wrong I fully expect them to make the law permanent at the end of its sunset in 6 months.
          As usual, the Dems are now saying what a mistake they made in giving bush what he wanted.
          Unfortunately this is the same thing they always say every time they give away more of our rights but yet they never do anything about it whenever they have the chance.
          They can't have it both ways although they seem to think that they can.
          BTW I have started using a new Browser called AVANT instead of OPERA and it seems to be able to work on all the websites I go to so far including Tribe and My Space, so I hope to be more active once again on my Tribe site. It got to be a real pain to have to switch to Netscape everytime I wanted to post on MySpace or Tribe.
          • Re: BUSH TO USE SPY SATELLITES ON AMERICANS

            Wed, August 22, 2007 - 12:20 AM
            >I just can't believe how badly the Dems have caved in to bush and although I hope I am wrong I fully expect them to make the law permanent at the end of its sunset in 6 months.

            Yeah, I'm worried about this.

            AVANT? I've been pretty happy with Firefox..... Does AVANT play nicely with Macs?
  • Dee
    Dee
    offline 2

    Re: BUSH TO USE SPY SATELLITES ON AMERICANS

    Mon, August 27, 2007 - 7:28 AM
    What an eye-opener. I'm so worried most of the time about terrorists, I hadn't thought thru this issue, it only stands to reason it will turn right around and bite you, they're just eating away at our rights a nibble at a time.