Technically Incorrect: The
Range-R is a piece of military equipment that police are using now to
check if there's someone in a building.
Police forces increasingly are taking advantage of the technology behind military equipment initially designed for combat.
Sometimes, though, the police might be coy about which of these gadgets they use to protect and serve.
He
described the Range-R as a "hand-held Doppler radar device." He added:
"It picks up breathing, human breathing and movement within a house." In
the Denver case, police were trying to apprehend someone who allegedly
had violated his parole.
The Range-R's manufacturers explain
that the device is to be held against a wall. Users then push a couple
of buttons that send radar pulses through the wall to detect if anyone
is inside. The device covers a conical view of 160 degrees. It works in a
range of around 50 feet.
Though it "will penetrate most
common building wall, ceiling or floor types -- including poured
concrete, concrete block, brick, wood, stucco glass, adobe, dirt" --
the Radar-R does not work through metal. Moreover, if a wall is
saturated with water, this also may reduce the device's effect. The
device costs around $6,000.
Clearly, though, those who
still value their privacy will be concerned. What's to stop any member
of law enforcement from placing one against anyone's wall just to see if
they're home? Theoretically nothing.
That said, in 2013, the Supreme Court heard the case of Florida vs Jardines.
Here, police led a drug-sniffer dog to a suspect's porch. The dog
detected marijuana plants. The suspect was arrested. The court
suppressed that evidence. Citing the Fourth Amendment, the court argued
for "the right of a man to retreat into his own home and there be free
from unreasonable governmental intrusion." It added that the area
immediately surrounding the home "is part of the home itself for Fourth
Amendment purposes."
With the Range-R, you may not even know the intrusion is happening.
I have contacted Range-R's manufacturers, L-3
Communications, to ask how many police forces are supplied with this
equipment. I will update, should I hear.
I also have
contacted some police forces to ask whether they might use a Range-R
occasionally. Again, I will update, should they confess.
It's
entirely understandable that police forces would want to use the most
updated equipment. Their reticence about admitting the technology's use
is, again, understandable -- but is it right?
There's
inevitably the temptation to use gadgets such as Range-R without a
warrant. In the case with so-called Stingrays -- devices that mimic
cell-towers to capture phone data -- the FBI has argued that warrants aren't necessary at all.
As
technology becomes more and more intrusive -- and surreptitiously so --
the idea of your home being a safe haven begins to seem wistful at
best.
Source: http://www.cnet.com
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