Watch What You Say At the Bus Stop, Uncle Brother May Be Listening: DHS Adds Cameras to Bus Stops As Part of City-Wide Police Surveillance Networks to Watch "the Public" ['free range prisoners']
Prison Nation - U.S. Citizen - Unnecessarily Suffering citizen and enemy of the state -freely deluded to imagine otherwise." As defined in FUNKTIONARY
From [MassPrivateI ] Not content with surveillance cameras on buses, the police state has now begun adding them to bus stops.
Last month an article in WTVR 6 revealed that the Greater Richmond Transit Center (GRTC) is installing more than one hundred surveillance cameras at bus stops.
What should really concern everyone is the amount of cameras being installed at each bus stop.
WTVR also revealed that police can use the cameras to spy on commuters 24/7 in real-time.
"The system will be live 24 hours a day and will be connected to Richmond 911 call center," Rose Pace said.
According to Style Weekly, police will now have access to more than three hundred surveillance cameras.
What's wrong with adding four surveillance cameras to bus stops you ask?
Every one of GRTC's buses are equipped with four surveillance cameras, that are capable of spying on 1.6 million commuters.
If you combine bus stop cameras with police cam-share cameras, the picture becomes even more frightening.
Businesses across the country are being encouraged to allow police to have real-time access to their CCTV cameras. Effectively creating a city-wide police surveillance network.
At a time when violent crime is at historic lows one has to ask, why do we need city-wide police surveillance networks?
Who's behind city-wide police surveillance networks?
DHS and the TSA's role in turning public transportation into city-wide police surveillance networks is unmistakable.
A 2010 US Government Accountability Office report titled 'Public Transit Information Sharing' revealed that the TSA and DHS are working together to create a giant public transit surveillance network.
A Google search of 'DHS and mass transit' and the 'TSA and mass transit', returned close to 600,000 and 400,000 hits respectively. [MORE]