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Is There a Drone in Your Backyard?
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: What
Constitutes a Fair Trial?
Earlier this
week, the federal government announced that the Air Force might
be dispatching drones to a backyard near you. The stated purpose
of these spies in the sky is to assist local police to find missing
persons or kidnap victims, or to chase bad guys.
If the drone
operator sees you doing anything of interest (Is your fertilizer
for the roses or to fuel a bomb? Is that Sudafed for your cold or
your meth habit? Are you smoking in front of your kids?), the feds
say they may take a picture of you and keep it. The feds
predict that they will dispatch or authorize about 30,000 of these
unmanned aerial vehicles across America in the next 10 years. Meanwhile,
more than 300 local and state police departments are awaiting federal
permission to use the drones they already have purchased – usually
with federal stimulus funds.
The government
is out of control.
If the police
use a drone without a warrant to see who or what is in your backyard
or your bedroom, or if while looking for a missing child the drone
takes a picture of you in your backyard or bedroom and the government
keeps the picture, its use is unnatural and unconstitutional.
I say "unnatural"
because we all have a natural right to privacy; it is a fundamental
right that is inherent in our humanity. All of us have times of
the day and moments in our behavior when we expect that no one –
least of all the government – will be watching. When the government
watches us during those times, it violates our natural right to
privacy. It also violates our constitutional right to privacy. The
Supreme Court has held consistently that numerous clauses in the
Bill of Rights keep the government at bay without a warrant.
Even when we
don't have an expectation of privacy, we do have a right to be left
alone. But merely watching us in public isn't enough for the police,
as many street corner cameras are equipped with listening devices
and tiny megaphones. We can expect that these devices will soon
bark commands: "Put down that BlackBerry." "Look to your right before
crossing." "Don't kiss her; a car is coming." Actually, Big Brother
is coming, and he's not smiling.
Big Brother
is watching from the skies, as well as the streets. This started
when the Department of Defense decided to offer help to police –
and they are prepared to accept. Never mind that the military may
not lawfully operate within our borders, except in the case of rebellion,
and then only when publicly authorized by the president. Never mind
that the military may not lawfully be used for law enforcement,
except in the case of disaster, and then only when publicly authorized
by the president. And never mind that this use of drones by the
Air Force was not the result of legislation debated and enacted
by Congress, but was done under the authority of the president alone.
Add to all
this the use of drones to kill people. President Obama has argued
that he can use drones to kill Americans overseas, whose deaths
he believes will keep us all safer, without any constitutional due
process whatsoever. His attorney general has argued that the president's
careful consideration of each target and the narrow use of deadly
drones are an adequate substitute for due process. Of course, no
court has ever ruled that way. The president's national security
adviser has argued that the use of drones is humane since they are
"surgical" and only kill their targets. Of course, that's not true,
but it misses the point. Without a declaration of war, the president
can't lawfully kill anyone, no matter how humane his killing.
How long will
it be before the Air Force and the police adopt the unconstitutional
arguments of the president's wrongheaded advisers and use the drones
not only to spy but also to kill Americans in America?
The whole reason
we have a Bill of Rights is to assure that tyranny does not happen
here, to guarantee that the government to which we have supposedly
consented will leave us alone. Do you think the government accepts
that? Would you feel safe with a drone in your backyard? Would you
feel like you were in America?
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
May 17, 2012
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written six books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is It
Is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong: The Case
for Personal Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano
and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit creators.com.
Copyright
© 2012 Andrew P. Napolitano
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