Record #: O2013-8436   
Type: Ordinance Status: Failed to Pass
Intro date: 11/13/2013 Current Controlling Legislative Body: Committee on Public Safety
Final action: 5/20/2015
Title: Temporary moratorium on purchase, rental, lease or possession of drones
Sponsors: Waguespack, Scott
Topic: CITY COUNCIL - Miscellaneous
Attachments: 1. O2013-8436
Related files: R2015-407
Send to Committee on Public Safety

ORDINANCE
WHEREAS, the use and premature deployment of unmanned aerial vehicles has outpaced public policy discourse throughout the United States; and

WHEREAS, the unnecessary use of drones poses a serious threat to the privacy and constitutional rights of the citizens of Chicago and the United States; and

WHEREAS drone proliferation threatens the risk of unmanned aerial vehicles becoming increasingly available to journalists, bloggers, news organizations, and others who gather and disseminate'public and nonpublic information on the Internet for profit or for political or other : reasons;

WHEREAS drone proliferation threatens the risk of unmanned aerial vehicles becoming increasingly available to violent criminal organizations such as gangs;

WHEREASHocal police forces-around the-country-have attempted-to purchase-military drone-
hardware for civilian use, reflecting a broader trend towards the militarization of local police
agencies;

WHEREAS persistent or ambient surveillance of the sort enabled by drones entails serious constitutional abuses of police authority by effectively circumventing the Fourth Amendment's longstanding requirements concerning warrants and due process;

WHEREAS drones can be outfitted with super-sensory technologies such as thermal imaging software and the capability to "see through" walls;

WHEREAS drones are capable of hovering outside the windows of private dwellings to peer inside;

WHEREAS drones can be outfitted with technologies such as license plate readers and Internet packet sniffing technology that enable pervasive surveillance without particularity, circumventing the requirements of the Fourth Amendment;

WHEREAS, drone technology is developing so rapidly that the potential impacts on privacy and Fourth Amendment rights is difficult to predict;

WHEREAS persistent or ambient surveillance, coupled with currently expanding programs to monitor and criminalize nonviolent activism, threatens to ...

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