Reports suggest local law
enforcement agencies are considering shutting down cell phone services in Chicago
over the weekend and while it will most likely be very effective, many are
questioning if the move is legitimate.
The Daily Beast reports that the FBI
and Secret Service have standing authority to jam signals and they can also
push for the shutdown of cell towers, thanks to “Standard Operating Procedure
(SOP) 303,” which lays out the nation’s official “Emergency Wireless
Protocols.”
According to the National
Communications System, the protocol details a “shutdown and restoration process
for use by commercial and private wireless networks during national crises.”
It was created after the London
bombings in 2005, when federal security services shut off cellular networks in
New York’s tunnel, fearing a similar attack. Since then, cell phone jammers
have been used in situations like President Obama’s inauguration, with the
Secret Service claiming there was a bomb threat, as well as a number of other
cases.
Most recently, however, cell phone
service was suspended in San Francisco, where police of the Bay Area Rapid
Transit (BART) subway system temporarily shut down cell service to interfere
with a protest over a shooting by a BART police officer.
Initially, the BART police claimed
they had appealed to the cellular providers to cut off services but later
admitted to pulling the plug themselves. The American Civil Liberties Union
called this move “the first and only known time a government agency in the US
has blocked electronic communications as a way to quell social unrest.”
The possibility of the situation
repeating itself in Chicago is not one the public is fond of. Apart from the
obvious indignation at civil rights violations, people all over the web are
posing perfectly reasonable questions such as what if they have to call 911?
What if they have a family
emergency? And why should those not involved with Occupy Chicago or any other
protest movements suffer service disruptions?
The irony of the situation is, of
course, in the fact that the US security services are considering doing
something they’ve condemned others for.
Just a month ago, President Barack
Obama announced a plan to penalize authoritarian regimes that block internet
access for protesters.
The penalties will be aimed at
countries like Syria and Iran that use technology to enable human-rights abuses
against dissidents – but to many, this is a perfect example of double
standards.
This potential development is just
one of the drastic security measures Chicago law enforcement agencies are
considering.
They’ve
also invested as much as $1
million on riot-control equipment, including at least one long-range
acoustic device, or LRAD, and upgrades to shields to be worn by the police.
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