WHDH TV 7 News New
video you’ll see on just one station–and it may include pictures of
you! Tonight in her exclusive report, Hank reveals how law enforcement
officials are secretly videotaping events–and creating secret
“intelligence files” about innocent people! And now two major civil
rights groups are calling for the practice to stop! How could it happen?
Hank investigates.
Are you in this video? If you were at the peace march at the Park
Street T last October you might be. But 7news didn’t shoot this–it’s
from Boston police department’s secret surveillance files! Files marked
“homeland security” and “extremist”.
Susan Barney of Arlington–a child care provider–was shocked to find
her peaceful appearances in public places were being watched–and
documented.
Susan Barney, Arlington Resident:
I am in no way a terrorist. I am no way a criminal.
Look at these videos: this one on Boston Common, this one in the
financial district–and more–taped by Boston police since 2011. Why is
law enforcement recording stuff like this? They say they’re collecting
information for a little-known organization called BRIC–the Boston
Regional Intelligence Center. It’s funded by homeland security, and its
mission? Use these local police departments to watch out for terrorist
threats and share information. Problem is: they’re also creating files
about innocent people.
Urzsula Maszny-Latos, National Lawyers Guild:
“They are really monitoring everything that they consider suspicious, even those actions are suspicious in anyway.
Hank:
Do you think people know they’re in police video files?
Urzsula Maszny-Latos, National Lawyers Guild:
They don’t!
All these tapes–and this huge stack of reports–stayed secret until
this recent lawsuit filed by the ACLU and the Mass Lawyers guild. They
now say it proves police are not only targeting real terrorists, they’re
tracking peaceful activists, and what’s more, the police are keeping
the information on file!
Urzsula Maszny-Latos National Lawyers Guild:
“If an officer videotapes an event and nothing happens after ninety days, the tape should be destroyed.”
Hank:
“Is that what’s happening now?”
Urzsula Maszny-Latos, National Lawyers Guild:
“It’s not.”
Look–some of these surveillance “reports” are four and five years
old! Why were the police were keeping them? In this letter, the police
explain it was a “software error” and most of the files “should have
been purged.”
Carol Rose, ACLU:
“It’s wrong in a democracy for the government to spy on its own citizens and label them as criminals.”
The ACLU and the Guild are now calling for this surveillance to stop.
Boston Police tell us BRIC does not maintain surveillance on peaceful
protest groups, and they do not monitor events without specific
information on suspected criminal activity.
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