
“Most of the missions are performed for the Coast Guard, the Drug Enforcement Administration and immigration authorities. But they also aid in disaster relief and in the search for marijuana crops, methamphetamine labs and missing persons, among other missions not directly related to border protection. Because they have sophisticated cameras and can remain in flight for many hours at a time, civil libertarians have argued that these aircraft could lead to persistent visual surveillance of Americans on private property. Government lawyers have argued, however, that there is no meaningful legal distinction between the use of unmanned and piloted aircraft for surveillance.”
Related posts:
French crackdown on tax cheats 'to accelerate'
Peter Schiff: Fed Taper Will Trigger Recession
Federal Reserve studying effect of Paypal and Bitcoin on banking
Britain has left the European Union in all but name
Rampant recycling fraud is draining California cash
States Siphon Gas Tax for Other Uses
$10 trillion IPO plan for Saudi Aramco confirmed
Possessing a little marijuana no longer criminal in Rhode Island
Imminent Iran nuclear threat? A timeline of warnings since 1979.
Britain issues first non-Chinese sovereign RMB bond
Does billboard comparing Obama to alleged shooter go too far?
Australian Government to establish bank bailout fund with new levy
Barack Obama is pushing gun control at home, but he’s a killer abroad
Obama Sees ObamaCare as Legacy Too Worthy to Resist
U.S. Household Income Sinks to '95 Level