Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Drones helped in big Vancouver arrest. It's time for policy scrutiny, researchers say

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Sep, 2024 12:09 PM
  • Drones helped in big Vancouver arrest. It's time for policy scrutiny, researchers say

Canadian police forces have been using drones for many years, but scrutiny of their use is lacking, especially as the technology has evolved, privacy and surveillance researchers say. 

Their concerns come after Vancouver's Chief Const. Adam Palmer revealed that investigators deployed drones to locate a suspect in a pair of gruesome stranger attacks in the city's downtown on Wednesday, that left one man dead and another with a severed hand.

Palmer paid tribute to the role of the drone operator in the arrest of 34-year-old White Rock man, who has now been charged with second-degree murder and aggravated assault. 

Brenda McPhail, an instructor in the public policy and digital society program at McMaster University, said the public only tends to hear about police use of drones "where there's been a success."

"Very generally, the transparency and accountability for the police use of drones is a concern," McPhail said in an interview. "Police forces across Canada have been using drones for some time and yet you hear very little about them in the public." 

She said the public rarely gets a "line of sight into a failure" or misuse of the technology. 

"What we don't get is scrutiny about the mistakes," McPhail said. 

Drone technology had changed a lot in the last five years, she said, including newer and better cameras, and the potential to couple them with facial recognition technology makes it "time for renewed scrutiny" of police drone programs in Canada.

The Vancouver Police Department's drone program was launched in 2019, and McPhail said it went through a "policy process" that included consultations with privacy and civil liberties advocates. 

The resultant "remotely piloted aerial system" policy includes a ban on flights "for surveillance purposes," except where there's an "imminent risk to life or safety."

It also bans drone flights to record or identify people taking part in peaceful protests.

The 2019 policy touts drones as tools "to gather digital imagery in an effort to support public safety, enhance investigative techniques, expand operational awareness and aid in critical incident resolution."

Police drone pilots, the policy states, can be authorized to aid in a number of situations including "mass casualty events," disaster responses, missing persons investigations, hazardous material spills or volatile situations including "barricaded suspects, hostage situations, active deadly threat scenarios, high risk search warrants, and suicidal persons." 

Palmer said Wednesday the department launched "multiple drones" during the hunt for the Vancouver attacker, and one was in "close proximity" to where investigators arrested McBride after a tip from a member of the public. 

McPhail, the former director of the privacy, technology and surveillance program at the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, said changes to drone programs and updates to the technology should require more consultations to keep policies up-to-date and "new safeguards." 

She said police in Toronto, for example, used drones to monitor crowds at a Canada Day celebration back in July, causing a "bit of controversy." 

"And yet in Toronto, we've absolutely never had a public conversation about whether we want police using surveillance drones for what they would call public safety at public gatherings, which edges very closely to public surveillance at public gatherings," she said. 

"This kind of technology, if used inappropriately and without the right guardrails, has the potential to be really invasive. Police use of them has the potential to violate Charter rights." 

Scott Thompson, an assistant sociology professor and surveillance researcher at the University of Saskatchewan, said public opinion in Canada has been supportive of police drones in "single-event uses," such as finding criminal suspects or aiding in searches for missing persons. 

But public "push back" to the technologies comes when it's used for collecting personal information like license plates or "pattern of life" data, where peoples' movements can be tracked over large distances over long periods of time, he said. 

Police forces, Thompson said, often portray drone use in the best possible terms. 

"They're kind of shy to let the public know exactly what the capabilities are or how often they're deployed," he said. "But if we want an open society in which people can participate, we really need to know how often these technologies are being used and for what purposes." 

Thompson said drones still have limitations, such as battery life, but "the technology is moving forward every day." 

He said some jurisdictions in the United States have started using "drones as first responders," sending them to every police call, with "continuous" flights over geographic areas, collecting data somewhat indiscriminatingly. 

"These are places that policing in Canada have not yet stepped into, but as the technology gets better, they will be issues moving forward and that's where we run into that concern about routine collection and pattern of life collection," he said.

Thompson said advancements in surveillance technologies means there's a growing "invasiveness into our daily lives." 

"That's why it's super important that we have these conversations now before we have constant surveillance all the time, so the public can have a say in what it is that they expect in regards to privacy and what type of policing we want in our community," he said. "Privacy is a serious concern because it's a central feature of freedom and democracy within our society."

"Without privacy, we don't have a capacity to feel free to voice our opinions, so this is something we always want to be concerned about."

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadians mark 80th anniversary of D-Day as sun shines on Juno Beach in Normandy

Canadians mark 80th anniversary of D-Day as sun shines on Juno Beach in Normandy
The sun was shining on the beaches of Normandy on Thursday morning as a Canadian ceremony to commemorate the 80th anniversary of D-Day got underway in Courseulles-sur-Mer, France.

Canadians mark 80th anniversary of D-Day as sun shines on Juno Beach in Normandy

Calgarians told not to have showers, baths after critical water main break

Calgarians told not to have showers, baths after critical water main break
Residents in Calgary are being directed not to take showers or baths and some are being told to boil their water as the city grapples with a major water main break. The city issued the warning just before the morning commute following the water main break in the city’s northwest.

Calgarians told not to have showers, baths after critical water main break

New fee for streaming companies serves Canadian interests at Americans' expense: U.S.

New fee for streaming companies serves Canadian interests at Americans' expense: U.S.
American streaming companies are being unfairly targeted by a new Canadian fee that "disproportionately" serves interests north of the border, the United States is charging. This week, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission directed foreign streaming companies such as Netflix and Spotify to put five per cent of their Canadian revenues toward local news and Canadian content. 

New fee for streaming companies serves Canadian interests at Americans' expense: U.S.

Fire destroys sports store

Fire destroys sports store
Police in Metro Vancouver say a fire that destroyed a building used to store athletic equipment has been declared suspicious in nature. Delta Police say investigators have yet to identify any suspects in the blaze that occurred near a park in Tsawwassen early in the morning on May 17th.

Fire destroys sports store

2 facing auto theft charges

2 facing auto theft charges
R-C-M-P in Surrey say two men face a series of charges after being found with two stolen vehicles. The Mounties say a report of a stolen work van led police to arrest the two suspects last week.

2 facing auto theft charges

2 in hospital in Vancouver blaze

2 in hospital in Vancouver blaze
Vancouver police are working to determine what caused a fire at an apartment building that sent two people to hospital. Nearly 50 firefighters responded to the blaze in the city's West End this morning.

2 in hospital in Vancouver blaze