“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:
First Tax Haven in Armenia Launched
In trial over OKC bombing evidence, FBI accused of threatening witness
US Bid to Contain Russia and Latin America Speeds New Alliances
FDA May Have Age Restrictions On Cups Of Coffee
Colorado Gun Owners Display Blatant Defiance Of New Law
Visa aims to make future payments friction-free
Online freedom suffered setbacks in many countries
Charles Ramsey Interview, Cleveland Man That Found Amanda Berry
Alabama Gov. orders investigation after DNA, blood samples collected at roadblocks
Mob attacks gay couple’s engagement ceremony in Haiti
Ron Paul: NSA's PRISM Is An Awakening Call
Bloomberg: The Death of Cash
Eleven people across UK arrested for making 'racist or anti-religious' comments on Facebook
Codename 'Apalachee': How America Spies on Europe and the UN
List of top places with bargain homes; don't look for California cities