Warning of grave threats to Americans’ privacy and demanding transparency in the name of public good, the national ACLU and its Massachusetts chapter filed a federal lawsuit Thursday against the U.S. Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Drug Enforcement Administration in an effort to unveil the agencies’ secretive use of facial recognition technology nationwide.
“There can be no accountability if there is no transparency.”
—Kade Crockford, ACLU of Massachusetts
“There can be no accountability if there is no transparency,” declared Kade Crockford, director of the ACLU of Massachusetts’ Technology for Liberty Program. “This dystopian surveillance technology threatens to fundamentally alter our free society into one where we’re treated as suspects to be tracked and monitored by the government 24/7.”
The lawsuit (pdf), filed under the Freedom of Information Act in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, aims “to understand and inform the public about, among other things, how face recognition and other biometric identification technologies are currently being used by the government, and what, if any, safeguards are currently in place to prevent their abuse and protect core constitutional rights.”
Pointing out in blog post on the ACLU’s website that “face and other biometric surveillance technologies can enable undetectable, persistent, and suspicionless surveillance on an unprecedented scale,” Crockford highlighted concerns about the FBI specifically, considering the agency’s track record.
“When placed in the hands of the FBI—an unaccountable, deregulated, secretive intelligence agency with an unresolved history of anti-Black racism—there is even more reason for alarm,” Crockford wrote. “And when that agency stonewalls our requests for information about how its agents are tracking and monitoring our faces, we should all be concerned.”
In January, the ACLU filed a public records request seeking information about the FBI and DEA’s “use of facial recognition and other biometric system.” However, despite both agencies acknowledging the following month that they had received the request, neither has provided the legal group with any relevant documents—refusals which eventually led to Thursday’s lawsuit.
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