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St. Louis Once Again Set To Debate Surveillance Accountability Bill

The Real Time Crime Center in St. Louis
Rebecca Rivas
/
Missouri Independent
The Real Time Crime Center in St. Louis

The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department is one of about a dozen departments nationwide that have a 鈥渞eal time crime center,鈥 or a high-tech surveillance hub.

There, police officers can access about 1,100 cameras located throughout the city 鈥 some of which have the power to zoom in and identify people鈥檚 faces from more than a block away. Others are license plate reader cameras posted on traffic lights. And about 500 of those are cameras that private groups own and voluntarily feed into the center.

A handful of police officers work inside a room with a wall full of screens, locating footage to supply information to officers on the ground.

When the center opened in 2015, city leaders were so excited about its crime-fighting possibilities 鈥 but admittedly less attention was put towards drafting a privacy policy.

Now six years later, city residents still don鈥檛 have a clear path to find out how the city鈥檚 surveillance programs are being used, how much they cost and what impact they鈥檙e having on crime and residents鈥 lives.

However , the city鈥檚 Board of Aldermen will begin debating a bill that aims to increase transparency at the crime center and with other tax-funded surveillance programs. With support of the new mayor, the issue has renewed momentum and will likely pass.

In 2015, then-mayor Francis Slay鈥檚 administration issued a that they acknowledged to community leaders was essentially a rough draft. Soon after the center opened, Slay鈥檚 team brought together leaders from the police and streets departments, as well as members of the ACLU and a couple aldermen to write a more comprehensive policy.

But the final draft stalled out on the former police chief鈥檚 desk and was never implemented.

Two years later, former city Alderman Terry Kennedy attempted to pass a board bill that would require city entities to provide a 鈥渟urveillance plan鈥 every year with details about how they use their surveillance technology 鈥 and whether or not these cameras are targeting and causing harm to communities of color. It failed largely because some aldermen felt it would make the process too lengthy if they wanted to install cameras in their own wards.

Every year since, but has failed.

In May, Alderwoman Annie Ricethat will pick up the torch, and it鈥檚 her second time doing so. Some of the opponents鈥 concerns 鈥 including who reviews the surveillance plans 鈥 have been addressed, though others criticisms remain.

Mayor Tishaura Jones said residents deserve to have oversight of this technology, and it needs to be done with an equity lens.

鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just about accountable technology,鈥 Jones said. 鈥淭his is about racial equity and ensuring our Black and Brown people can walk in their own neighborhoods without being recorded or mistaken for somebody else.鈥

A 鈥榖lack box鈥

At the Real Time Crime Center, a handful of St. Louis police officers work inside a room with a wall full of screens, locating footage to supply information to officers on the ground.
Rebecca Rivas
/
The Missouri Independent
At the Real Time Crime Center, a handful of St. Louis police officers work inside a room with a wall full of screens, locating footage to supply information to officers on the ground.

As part of the city鈥檚 2015 privacy policy, the police and streets departments already provide an annual audit to the city鈥檚 operations director regarding where their cameras are located and how many they have. These reports are not posted on the city鈥檚 website, but they are public record.

So, the annual report that Rice鈥檚 bill calls for is not a new practice. What the bill asks for is more details 鈥 including how the surveillance equipment is being deployed, the specific impacts of the surveillance programs and how the data is being stored.

In 2015, the police department also passed its own policy about how to address privacy issues. Yet, it鈥檚 been nearly impossible to determine 鈥 as the police department repeatedly claimed 鈥 if the Real Time Crime Center is meeting its own protocols for safeguarding privacy, according to a .

After months of repeated requests through Missouri鈥檚 Sunshine Law for information about who has access to the surveillance information and multiple requests for interviews, the police department did not provide any portion of the internal documentation required by its own privacy policy on sharing the center鈥檚 information 鈥 including a log of all records requests made by people from within and outside the police department.

However, a created as part of that investigation also showed the city鈥檚 cameras are not located in the neighborhoods that have the most profound problems with violent crime, specifically homicides.

Alderwoman Cara Spencer, who sits on the aldermanic public safety committee that would be tasked with reviewing the surveillance plans, has repeatedly described the police department鈥檚 surveillance program as a 鈥渂lack box.鈥

Spencer and other committee members would have the opportunity to ask questions of the police department at the annual public hearings.

The bill also asks city entities to respond to questions about targeting specific geographic areas and communities. 鈥淲hat measures will be taken to ensure such targeting is racially and economically neutral?鈥 the bill states. Another question is: 鈥淲hat measures will be used to avoid biases in surveillance targeting and data collection?鈥

Alicia Hern谩ndez, a community organizer with the ACLU of Missouri, is concerned about governments using the equipment to 鈥渟py on residents鈥 who haven鈥檛 been implicated in criminal activity.

鈥淭he current laws do not protect you from these violations of your privacy and civil rights,鈥 Hern谩ndez said. 鈥淲e need guardrails and transparency in place as this rapidly encroaching, untested and unregulated technology sweeps across the nation.鈥

But the legislation doesn鈥檛 necessarily have guardrails. While it requires the city departments 鈥 and potentially the taxing and business districts 鈥 to provide information and answer questions about their programs to a committee, the bill doesn鈥檛 set any benchmarks to meet. If the plan doesn鈥檛 meet the expectations of the public safety committee, then they can vote it down.

But as seen with tax abatement proposals, aldermen don鈥檛 tend to scrutinize plans when they don鈥檛 have specific benchmarks.

鈥淚t does put more of a burden on the public,鈥 Rice said. 鈥淎nd it does put more burden on those public safety committee members to do a little bit more of their own outside thinking than they would if they had a policy in front of them.鈥

These benchmarks are something that might develop out of the public hearings, said John Chasnoff, a member of the surveillance watchdog coalition Privacy Watch and who was part of the group that the mayor鈥檚 team invited to draft a more comprehensive policy in 2015.

鈥淭he overarching goal is to create a situation where the community itself is able to decide what its comfort level is,鈥 Chasnoff said. 鈥淎nd what safeguards do we need to have in place to be comfortable? That becomes, with this bill, a community decision after a very open and transparent conversation.鈥

Business districts

The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department鈥檚 crime center can access about 1,100 cameras located throughout the city.
Wiley Price
/
The St. Louis American
The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department鈥檚 crime center can access about 1,100 cameras located throughout the city.

The bill could also potentially apply to the city鈥檚 taxing districts 鈥 including community improvement districts 鈥 that use sales or property tax revenue to buy cameras.

The Central West End Neighborhood Security Initiative (CWE-NSI) accounts for The CWE-NSI鈥檚 office sits in one of the more affluent neighborhoods in the city. There, security staff only review footage if they hear about an incident from the police department, said Jim Whyte, who leads the office.

The initiative is largely funded through property tax revenue from the neighborhoods it serves. Whyte calls it 鈥減assive surveillance鈥 because his team doesn鈥檛 watch the footage in real time.

In the past, Whyte has been opposed to the bill because he had concerns about a citizen advisory committee being the entity reviewing and scrutinizing the surveillance plans.

Yet, he鈥檚 supportive of the overall idea of the ordinance.

鈥淚 understand the need for oversight of city agencies,鈥 Whyte said. 鈥淚 support the purpose of having a way to understand what technology is being used, why it鈥檚 being used, and where in the city it鈥檚 being used.鈥

However, there are parts of the bill that give him pause, including a clause that states evidence should be deleted if it has been collected from unsanctioned surveillance equipment. He would like the city counselor鈥檚 office to review that portion.

Whyte also wishes that his organization had been more involved in the drafting of the bill, but believes there is a chance to tweak it in committee to 鈥渃ome up with a good piece of law.鈥

Rice said in response, 鈥淲e can work through some of their concerns, but accountability with tax money and public surveillance is important, and we can appropriately include them in this needed oversight.鈥

The CWE-NSI is by far the group that has the most cameras, said Rachel Witt, executive director of the South Grand Community Improvement District, which is a taxing district.

Most of the other districts have gifted cameras to the police department and don鈥檛 have access to them. The aldermen representing these neighborhoods have also purchased cameras through their ward capital improvements funds, meaning they are city property.

Witt hopes the aldermen aren鈥檛 going to regularly prevent the South Grand group from putting up cameras if they don鈥檛 approve the plans. But she doesn鈥檛 believe that鈥檚 the Board of Aldermen鈥檚 intent.

鈥淭hey just want transparency,鈥 Witt said, 鈥渁nd to have an understanding where these cameras are going and how they鈥檙e being used. I think it鈥檚 something that鈥檚 extremely needed. I think the police department would agree.鈥

is part of States Newsroom, a network of news outlets supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.

Rebecca Rivas is a multimedia reporter who covers Missouri's cannabis industry for the Missouri Independent.