Man removes Feds’ spy cam, they demand it back, he refuses and sues.

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? —

Man removes feds’ spy cam, they demand it back, he refuses and sues

Camera believed to be part of “Operation Drawbridge” effort to monitor the border.






Enlarge / US Border Patrol supervisor Eugenio Rodriguez surveys the Rio Grande River and surrounding environs August 7, 2008 in Laredo, Texas.


271



Last November, a 74-year-old rancher and attorney was walking around his ranch just south of Encinal, Texas, when he happened upon a small portable camera strapped approximately eight feet high onto a mesquite tree near his son's home. The camera was encased in green plastic and had a transmitting antenna.

Not knowing what it was or how it got there, Ricardo Palacios removed it.

Soon after, Palacios received phone calls from Customs and Border Protection officials and the Texas Rangers. Each agency claimed the camera as its own and demanded that it be returned. Palacios refused, and they threatened him with arrest.

Palacios, who had run-ins with local CBP agents going back several years, took the camera as the last straw. He was tired of agents routinely trespassing on his land, and, even after complaining several times, he was frustrated that his grievances were not being heard.

As a possible way to ward off the threat of arrest, he sued the two agencies, along with a named CPB agent, Mario Martinez. Palacios accused them of trespass and of violating his constitutional rights.

"My client is 74 years old, he's a lawyer, been practicing for almost 50 years, he has no criminal history whatsoever, law-abiding citizen, respected lawyer and senior citizen," Raul Casso, one of the attorneys representing Palacios, told Ars. "To have put him in jail would have been—forget the indecency of it—what a way to end a career."

The camera now remains in Palacios' attorneys' possession while they are attempting to ask the case's judge to allow them to formally introduce it as evidence.

This federal lawsuit has raised thorny questions about the limits of the government's power to conduct surveillance—in the name of border security—on private property, without the landowner's permission.

"As a matter of policy, CBP does not comment on pending litigation," Jennifer Gabris, a CBP spokeswoman, emailed Ars.

The Texas Department of Public Safety similarly declined comment.

In court filings, Texas officials have claimed qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that protects law enforcement officials.

The border isn’t where you think it is



Palacios' ranch is situated at the 35-mile marker due north from Laredo, along Interstate 35, just three miles south of the small town of Encinal. The nearest US-Mexico border crossing is at Laredo.

The precise distance between the border and Palacios' ranch matters: under federal law, agents can go onto private property that is within 25 miles of the border "for the purpose of patrolling the border to prevent the illegal entry of aliens into the United States."

In other words, if Palacios' ranch were within that range, he likely wouldn't have a case.

This is related to, but distinct from, the 100-mile radius that the CBP claims it can operate in and warrantlessly stop people and search bags, cars, electronic devices, and more. This is commonly referred to as the "border exception" to the Fourth Amendment, which protects against warrantless searches and seizures. (There is currently a lawsuit over border searches of electronic devices underway in federal court in Massachusetts: Alasaad v. Duke.)

As Palacios alleges in the civil complaint, his interactions with CBP began in April 2010 when his two sons were stopped at a checkpoint along I-35. When one son, Ricardo Palacios Jr., refused to answer questions, he was taken to a secondary inspection where he was assaulted by a CBP officer. Eventually, after being detained for 90 minutes, he was driven home to the ranch just a few miles away.

Over the next several years, CBP agents roamed "freely about, day or night" on the Palacios ranch, despite his numerous efforts to protest. He even sent a formal letter to a regional CBP supervisor on April 9, 2010. However, the letter doesn't seem to have made any substantive difference.

A cycle of CBP agents making incursions onto the ranch and Palacios telling them to leave continued for years—that is, until he found the camera.



"Plaintiffs maintain that there is something creepy and un-American about such clandestine, surreptitious, 1984-style behavior on the part of Defendants—officers of the law," Palacios argues in the complaint.

Palacios and his attorneys believe that the camera is part of "Operation Drawbridge," an effort by the Texas Department of Public Safety to use "low-cost, commercially off-the-shelf technology that has been adapted to meet law enforcement needs," with "hundreds of cameras located along the border."

The cameras, which are in constant use, 24 hours a day, send alerts to the Border Patrol as well as state and local authorities.

"At approximately $300 per camera, they provide a high-tech capability at a low-tech cost," the Texas DPS website states.

The Texas DPS did not immediately respond to Ars' request for comment.

Since the lawsuit, Casso said, his client has only had one interaction with CBP: agents went to his door and asked his permission to pursue a group of people they believed were on his ranch and were undocumented. He agreed.

"Apparently, this lawsuit has rang their bell," Casso said. "On the one hand, it's good they're protecting us, but on the other hand, they're violating the Constitution. We have reason to believe that there are 4,000 cameras deployed throughout the region. Could there be more? Possibly."

Casso was quick to underscore that he was not suggesting that property owners within the border region go searching for similar cameras on their own land.

"That's their private business, not mine," he said.

The judge in the case, US Magistrate Judge Guillermo R. Garcia, has not scheduled any hearings for now.

"Our lawsuit is that we want a federal judge to tell the border patrol and the feds to not go on [Palacios'] property without permission or probable cause," David Almaraz, Palacios' other attorney, told Ars. "And if you all are going to keep doing that, you're going to have to pay for it. It's called the right to be left alone. That's what the Fourth Amendment is all about."


Cyrus Farivar Cyrus is a Senior Tech Policy Reporter at Ars Technica, and is also a radio producer and author. His latest book, Habeas Data, about the legal cases over the last 50 years that have had an outsized impact on surveillance and privacy law in America, is due out in May 2018 from Melville House. He is based in Oakland, California.
Email cyrus.farivar@arstechnica.com // Twitter @cfarivar

Views: 139

Comment

You need to be a member of 12160 Social Network to add comments!

Join 12160 Social Network

Comment by Chris of the family Masters on February 24, 2018 at 7:43pm

Zombies don't understand word "trespass".

Comment by david james on February 24, 2018 at 2:36pm

My response would be to shoot the cameras. Then ARREST any trespassers at GUNPOINT.  Not a 'popular' response-certainly. A line MUST be drawn somewhere SOON. These THUGS must pay a price for Trampling our Constitution !

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

tjdavis posted a photo
8 hours ago
tjdavis posted a video

Documentary: Making a Killing, The Untold Story of Psychotropic Drugging

PREMIERING 04/07/18 at 6 & 9pm PT. 𝗪𝗔𝗧𝗖𝗛📺 the Scientology Network on the web: http://Scientology.tv, or DIRECTV Channel 320, AppleTV, Roku, fireTV, Chr...
8 hours ago
Burbia commented on Less Prone's photo
Thumbnail

Rebuilding Khazaria

"Hungarians show highest rate of Ashkenazi genes after Israelis, company…"
11 hours ago
Doc Vega commented on Less Prone's blog post Pregnancy a Dicease?
"Less so true to maddeningly true! "
14 hours ago
Doc Vega favorited Less Prone's blog post Pregnancy a Dicease?
14 hours ago
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Touch Me

Touch Me Touch me, because I can’t breathe anymoreTouch me, I am the waves on the shoreTouch me,…See More
15 hours ago
Burbia posted a video
19 hours ago
MAC posted a discussion

COVID whistleblowers exposing the experimental mRNA vaccine as part of the globalist depopulation agenda

https://api-assets.infowars.com/2023/06/Hero2.jpeg" style="width: 800px; max-width: 100%; height:…See More
yesterday
tjdavis posted a video

This Is Their ''CHRIST'' They Desperately Wait For! MUST SEE! (2024)

If you want to support my work please visit my Etsy store, thank you:👉🔴My Etsy Shop (STFengraves): https://www.etsy.com/shop/STFengraves?ref=l2-about-shopn...
Saturday
FREEDOMROX posted a video

G4/G5 Geomagnetic Storm has Started! How will Earth's Magnetic Field Hold?

✅ Subscribe to my channel: @StefanBurns 🙏🥇 Become a special member and enjoy access to the Sól Tribe private Telegram channel, ad-free pre-release video...
Friday
Less Prone posted a blog post

Pregnancy a Dicease?

The traditional family unit is a solid foundation of a healthy society. It is the primary place…See More
Friday
FREEDOMROX's blog post was featured
Friday
Doc Vega's 2 blog posts were featured
Friday
cheeki kea's blog post was featured
Friday
Less Prone's blog post was featured
Friday
Cryptocurrency's blog post was featured
Friday
DTOM's 2 blog posts were featured
Friday
Less Prone favorited DTOM's blog post 100,000 Pages of Chemical Industry Secrets Gathered Dust in an Oregon Barn for Decades — Until Now
Friday
Burbia's blog post was featured

The Globalist One World Currency Will Look A Lot Like Bitcoin

Thursday, 27 July 2017 01:21 Brandon Smith"...Bitcoin arrives seemingly from nowhere, conjured by a…See More
Friday
Chris of the family Masters's blog post was featured

Soda Consumption During Hard Work in Hot Weather May Damage Your Kidneys

Story at-a-glanceRecent research demonstrates the acute deleterious effects soda can have on your…See More
Friday

© 2024   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted