ACLU Answers Congress’ Question ‘Can SBI Succeed?’: No (10/24/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: (202) 675-2312, media@dcaclu.org
Washington, DC – Congress asked today in a committee hearing appropriately
called "The Future of Border Security: Can SBINet succeed?" and the American
Civil Liberties Union has a definitive answer: No. Even Department of Homeland
Security Director Michael Chertoff himself has admitted the program has
problems, calling it "unsatisfactory."
Two subcommittees of the Homeland Security Committee – one that focuses on
border security and the other that focuses on oversight – posed the question
today to government officials responsible for the embattled SBINet, a ‘virtual’
border fence that relies on sensors and long-range cameras atop high observation
towers.
SBINet, shorthand for "Secure Border Initiative Network," raises serious
privacy concerns. The long-range surveillance cameras are capable of observing
the activities of everyday Americans living along the border, disrupting the
daily lives of ordinary people. The looming guard towers, visible for miles in
the spare Southwestern landscape, casts a mood of constant surveillance for
border residents.
SBINet has been riddled with problems from the planning stages, and now the
program is in more serious trouble than ever. Major media outlets have reported
that SBINet’s technology has failed on the ground and the program is billions of
dollars in the red. The volatile weather and untamed environment have resulted
in fuzzy, unfocused images, and the technology is incapable of doing the tasks
it was created to do. In addition, the communication between the surveillance
towers and the command center in Tucson is delayed because of the physical
distance, creating even more problems with SBINet.
The following can be attributed to Tim Sparapani, ACLU Senior Legislative
Counsel:
"SBINet is not a realistic alternative – it’s Big Brother at the border.
Asking whether SBINet can succeed is not a question at all: in the end the only
answer is no. We cannot let our government police the border by remote control.
We cannot allow guard towers to go up like high rises, and we cannot allow the
government to enter our homes through surveillance cameras. Our government
should not spend billions of dollars on untested technology that in the end
doesn’t work. Our government must examine the practical realities of programs
like SBINet before billions of dollars are spent to develop them – and SBINet
needs to be scrapped before the government wastes billions more."
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