SFPD “Clear and present threat to civil liberties of San Francisco”

SAN FRANCISCO

Lee Heidhues 7.30.2024

In May 2019 the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance regulating surveillance technology used by the San Francisco Police Department.

It’s obvious the cops have failed to get the message.

The willful non-compliance has resulted in a lawsuit against The City and County of San Francisco and possible dismissal of criminal prosecutions which fail to follow the Law.

The case is Secure Justice Inc. v. City and County of San Francisco – CPF-24-518631 attached below.

San Francisco Chronicle – Bob Egelko – 7.18.2024

Five years ago, San Francisco became the first U.S. city to require police and other agencies to seek approval from elected officials before using new methods of technology to conduct surveillance. But a lawsuit says the city has ignored its law for at least four years and allowed officers to use whatever surveillance techniques they choose.

SFPD Chief Bill Scott and then-District Attorney Chesa Boudin. Chesa fought the cops to guarantee transparency. Boudin paid the price for his advocacy. Recalled from office in a 9M MAGA funded campaign led by Mayor London Breed and his one time employee Brooke Jenkins. Jenkins was awarded for her political dirty work. She was named DA by the Mayor.

The Chronicle reported in 2020 that San Francisco police may have sidestepped the ordinance by using technology from a regional law enforcement agency, not covered by the law’s disclosure requirement, to investigate an illegal-gunfire case. Then-District Attorney Chesa Boudin said he was uncertain about using such evidence in a criminal prosecution.

Four years ago, the suit said, the San Francisco Police Department “quit complying with the Surveillance Ordinance and has not submitted to the (Board of Supervisors) any further proposed use policies for pre-existing technology.” 

Lee’s Perspective blog post – May 19, 2019

“Police surveillance technologies may help reduce crime,” lawyers for the nonprofit Secure Justice said in a suit filed Tuesday in San Francisco Superior Court. “But they also pose a clear and present threat to the civil liberties of the citizens of San Francisco.”

The technology is “controversial and error-prone,” particularly for racial minorities, the suit said. It said one study found a 35% error rate in identification of darker-skinned women.

The San Francisco ordinance took effect in June 2019 and similar measures have been adopted by many other local governments, including Oakland, Berkeley and Alameda. It requires police and other agencies using facial recognition technology to notify city officials of the technology they were already using, and to obtain approval from the Board of Supervisors for any new methods they planned to use.

Secure Justice said it identified 42 recognition technology programs in June 2023 that had not been approved by city officials, and asked for an explanation but received no reply. Police Chief Bill Scott confirmed to the city’s Committee on Information Technology in January 2023 that his department was using technology the Board of Supervisors had not approved and attributed the actions to two officers, the suit said.

While the ordinance allows police to continue using unapproved surveillance methods for a short period while they seek approval, that is not a “a get-out-of-jail-free card, wherein a guilty party can merely promise to do better next time by simply posting a notice and promising not to do it again,” Mitchell Chyette, a lawyer for Secure Justice, said in the suit. 

https://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/article/sfpd-facial-recognition-19582427.php