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Sunday, January 29, 2012

Kinda like a big dog to me....

I've often said you have no reasonable expectation of privacy in the open, such as walking in the street. For that reason I cannot object when people video tape officers working on the street. So turn about is fair play. Call it the Peacemaker.
Police roll out video surveillance truck called The Peacemaker

FORT LAUDERDALE— Tania Ouaknine is convinced the police are watching her.

She's not paranoid — it says as much on the red sign painted along the side on the hulking armored truck that's been parked in front of her eight-room Parisian Motel for several days.

"Warning: You are under video surveillance," reads the bold message on the side of the truck.

From the front bumper of the menacing vehicle, another sign taunts: "Whatcha gonna do when we come for you?"

The truck is a new weapon for the Fort Lauderdale Police Department in the fight against drugs and neighborhood nuisances, and it looks like a Winnebago on steroids. They call it "The Peacemaker," and it may be a first in South Florida.

Mixing high tech with simplicity, the in-your-face strategy is straightforward: load an out-of-service armored truck with some of the latest surveillance equipment available and decorate it with police emblems. Then, simply leave it parked in front of trouble spots...

...In August, police got the first of their two Peacemakers after paying the Brinks company $10 for a discontinued armored bank truck. They retrofitted the vehicle with cameras that can stream live video back to headquarters. With its cameras hoisted on each bullet-proof window, the truck can gather panoramic footage for up to 700 hours.

Last month the department added a second truck to its arsenal, converting a former SWAT vehicle into the second Peacemaker. Police park the unmanned trucks in front of the homes of suspected drug dealers and at crime-plagued street corners.
Ten bucks for an armored car...damned I thought I was cheap!
On a recent afternoon, a Peacemaker had at least one of its eight cameras trained on Ouaknine's one-story establishment...

...Some neighbors surrounding the Parisian Motel say the truck is another form of constant police harassment.

On a recent afternoon, Leo Cooper watched as two undercover street-crime officers jumped out of an unmarked Ford Crown Victoria just yards from the Peacemaker. They began questioning a group of men gathered at the corner. Within minutes, one of the men ran away. A second man was charged with loitering.

"This is what happens here every day. We can't sit outside without being harassed," said Cooper, 27. "Now we have that truck. Most of us are not doing anything wrong. We can't be outside?"

The police department has met the allegations of harassment with skepticism.

"People who are abiding by the law should have no problems with this," said Mandell. "People may feel that their privacy is being infringed on, but when you think about it, every day you walk down the street you are being watched by 20 to 30 cameras from private businesses and homes."

The feedback is much different in a neighborhood less than a mile east of the motel, close to where Sistrunk Boulevard is undergoing a major refurbishing project. In December, residents rallied at city meetings to get more police presence after a rash of daytime home burglaries, including one on New Year's Day, said Anthony Lucicero, a neighborhood leader.

"We had all sorts of people walking up and down this street at all hours," he said. "Prostitutes, junkies, everyone."

In early January, police parked the Peacemaker at an empty lot on Northwest Fifth Court between 10th and 11th avenues. Neighbors say it's already making a difference.

"Before the truck, we were afraid to go to work knowing your house might be robbed in the middle of the afternoon," said Lucicero's neighbor, Tangerine Davis. "Now we go to work in peace."

Their biggest worry now, they say, is what happens when the Peacemaker drives away and the police are no longer watching.

"I wish they had another one out here," Lucicero said. "I have an empty lot right there they can use."

A check with the region's major law enforcement agencies indicate Fort Lauderdale's Peacemakers may be the first in South Florida, but not the first in the nation. News reports show that agencies in Green Bay, Wis., Lafayette, La. and St. Louis, Mo., have been using them for at least a year.

"We are definitely not doing something like that right now," said Deputy Eric Davis, a spokesman for the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office. "I would love to see this for myself. Sounds pretty novel."

Again, this is no more than a new form of high tech patrol. And if it deters a crime it's worth the money. There is no issue of privacy as it is just recording things happening on the street. Fort Lauderdale, great work. Hope this catches on.

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