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Government drones used in 'runaway spying operation' to peek into backyards in Sonoma County, lawsuit says
Government drones used in 'runaway spying operation' to peek into backyards in Sonoma County, lawsuit says

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Government drones used in 'runaway spying operation' to peek into backyards in Sonoma County, lawsuit says

Three residents filed a lawsuit this week against Sonoma County seeking to block code enforcement from using drones to take aerial images of their homes in what the American Civil Liberties Union is calling a "runaway spying operation." The lawsuit, filed by the ACLU Wednesday on behalf of the three residents, alleges that the county began using drones with high-powered cameras and zoom lenses in 2019 to track illegal cannabis cultivation, but in the years since, officials have used the devices more than 700 times to find other code violations on private property without first seeking a warrant. "For too long, Sonoma County code enforcement has used high-powered drones to warrantlessly sift through people's private affairs and initiate charges that upend lives and livelihoods. All the while, the county has hidden these unlawful searches from the people they have spied on, the community, and the media," Matt Cagle, a senior staff attorney with the ACLU Foundation of Northern California, said in a statement. A spokesperson for Sonoma County said the county is reviewing the complaint and takes "the allegations very seriously." Read more: Will these drones 'revolutionize' 911 response? L.A. suburb will be first to test The lawsuit comes amid a national debate over the use of drones by government agencies who have increasingly relied on the unmanned aircraft during disasters and for environmental monitoring and responding to emergency calls. More recently, some agencies in California and in other states have explored using drones to investigate code enforcement violations. In 2024, nearly half of Sonoma County's drone flights involved non-cannabis violations, including construction without a permit, junkyard conditions and zoning violations, according to data included in the complaint. "The use of drones over someone's private space raises a question of what is considered private," said Ari Ezra Waldman, a professor of law at UC Irvine. Waldman said if law enforcement on the ground wants to see on the other side of a tall fence or trees into someone's property they have to get the person's consent or they need probable cause for a warrant. "Why shouldn't that apply above ground too?" he said. California doesn't have a law that regulates the use of drones by code enforcement agents. In 2015, lawmakers in the state Assembly approved a measure that would have restricted the use of drones over private property without the owner's permission. Then-Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed the bill saying at the time that it could expose hobbyists or commercial users to "burdensome litigation." The ACLU argues that the county's use of drones as an investigative tool violates the California Constitution which provides people the right to privacy and against unreasonable searches and seizures. "I think that our expectations of privacy are based on social norms and people don't normally expect that someone is going to have a super high powered, detailed ability to capture extraordinary detail with a camera that's just buzzing over their property," Waldman said. "We shouldn't have to walk around life expecting that just because this technology exists that we have no privacy from anything anymore, from any direction." The lawsuit also alleges that the county's drone policy has loosened in the past several years. In 2019, the policy required inspectors to receive a complaint about a property before deploying a drone. Now, officials have no such requirement, allowing them instead to launch "discretionary proactive investigations," the complaint states. Residents named in the lawsuit say that the drones hovering above their homes have resulted in ongoing privacy concerns and a loss of enjoyment of their property. One plaintiff, Benjamin Verdusco, decided to sell his home after he learned that the county had been taking pictures of his backyard with a drone in 2021, according to the complaint. Read more: Police drones could soon crisscross the skies. Cities need to be ready, ACLU warns Another plaintiff, Nichola Schmitz, who is deaf, wasn't able to hear the buzz of the drone hovering above her property on Oct.10, 2023. When a worker on her property pointed it out she "became confused and worried," the complaint states. She rushed to her bedroom and closed the curtains, concerned about how long the drone had been there and whether it had seen her naked on her property earlier that day. She alleges the drone made two big loops around her property and, shortly after, a red tag appeared on her gate alleging two violations of the county code — one for illegal grading and another for having on her property an unpermitted dwelling, a small cabin that her father had built on the land in 1981. She spent $25,000 for a contractor to fix the alleged grading issue but still faces $10,000 in fines. ACLU attorneys allege the evidence obtained by the drone was done so unlawfully because officials did not have a search warrant. "This horrible experience has shattered my sense of privacy and security," Schmitz said in a statement. "I'm afraid to open my blinds or go outside to use my hot tub because who knows when the county's drone could be spying on me." A third plaintiff, Suzanne Brock, confronted county officials after she learned that they had taken detailed aerial photos of her outdoor bathtub and shower that she and her daughter used daily. She expressed concern to inspectors that they might have seen her naked in the bathtub. Code Enforcement Inspector Ryan Sharp told her that "when we see something like that, we turn around," according to the complaint. When Brock asked if county officials see people during the flights, Sharp told her yes, according to the complaint, but added that "we don't put that in the camera footage." Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Government drones used in ‘runaway spying operation' to peek into backyards in Sonoma County, lawsuit says
Government drones used in ‘runaway spying operation' to peek into backyards in Sonoma County, lawsuit says

Los Angeles Times

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Los Angeles Times

Government drones used in ‘runaway spying operation' to peek into backyards in Sonoma County, lawsuit says

Three residents filed a lawsuit this week against Sonoma County seeking to block code enforcement from using drones to take aerial images of their homes in what the American Civil Liberties Union is calling a 'runaway spying operation.' The lawsuit, filed by the ACLU Wednesday on behalf of the three residents, alleges that the county began using drones with high-powered cameras and zoom lenses in 2019 to track illegal cannabis cultivation, but in the years since, officials have used the devices more than 700 times to find other code violations on private property without first seeking a warrant. 'For too long, Sonoma County code enforcement has used high-powered drones to warrantlessly sift through people's private affairs and initiate charges that upend lives and livelihoods. All the while, the county has hidden these unlawful searches from the people they have spied on, the community, and the media,' Matt Cagle, a senior staff attorney with the ACLU Foundation of Northern California, said in a statement. A spokesperson for Sonoma County said the county is reviewing the complaint and takes 'the allegations very seriously.' The lawsuit comes amid a national debate over the use of drones by government agencies who have increasingly relied on the unmanned aircraft during disasters and for environmental monitoring and responding to emergency calls. More recently, some agencies in California and in other states have explored using drones to investigate code enforcement violations. In 2024, nearly half of Sonoma County's drone flights involved non-cannabis violations, including construction without a permit, junkyard conditions and zoning violations, according to data included in the complaint. 'The use of drones over someone's private space raises a question of what is considered private,' said Ari Ezra Waldman, a professor of law at UC Irvine. Waldman said if law enforcement on the ground wants to see on the other side of a tall fence or trees into someone's property they have to get the person's consent or they need probable cause for a warrant. 'Why shouldn't that apply above ground too?' he said. California doesn't have a law that regulates the use of drones by code enforcement agents. In 2015, lawmakers in the state Assembly approved a measure that would have restricted the use of drones over private property without the owner's permission. Then-Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed the bill saying at the time that it could expose hobbyists or commercial users to 'burdensome litigation.' The ACLU argues that the county's use of drones as an investigative tool violates the California Constitution which provides people the right to privacy and against unreasonable searches and seizures. 'I think that our expectations of privacy are based on social norms and people don't normally expect that someone is going to have a super high powered, detailed ability to capture extraordinary detail with a camera that's just buzzing over their property,' Waldman said. 'We shouldn't have to walk around life expecting that just because this technology exists that we have no privacy from anything anymore, from any direction.' The lawsuit also alleges that the county's drone policy has loosened in the past several years. In 2019, the policy required inspectors to receive a complaint about a property before deploying a drone. Now, officials have no such requirement, allowing them instead to launch 'discretionary proactive investigations,' the complaint states. Residents named in the lawsuit say that the drones hovering above their homes have resulted in ongoing privacy concerns and a loss of enjoyment of their property. One plaintiff, Benjamin Verdusco, decided to sell his home after he learned that the county had been taking pictures of his backyard with a drone in 2021, according to the complaint. Another plaintiff, Nichola Schmitz, who is deaf, wasn't able to hear the buzz of the drone hovering above her property on Oct.10, 2023. When a worker on her property pointed it out she 'became confused and worried,' the complaint states. She rushed to her bedroom and closed the curtains, concerned about how long the drone had been there and whether it had seen her naked on her property earlier that day. She alleges the drone made two big loops around her property and, shortly after, a red tag appeared on her gate alleging two violations of the county code — one for illegal grading and another for having on her property an unpermitted dwelling, a small cabin that her father had built on the land in 1981. She spent $25,000 for a contractor to fix the alleged grading issue but still faces $10,000 in fines. ACLU attorneys allege the evidence obtained by the drone was done so unlawfully because officials did not have a search warrant. 'This horrible experience has shattered my sense of privacy and security,' Schmitz said in a statement. 'I'm afraid to open my blinds or go outside to use my hot tub because who knows when the county's drone could be spying on me.' A third plaintiff, Suzanne Brock, confronted county officials after she learned that they had taken detailed aerial photos of her outdoor bathtub and shower that she and her daughter used daily. She expressed concern to inspectors that they might have seen her naked in the bathtub. Code Enforcement Inspector Ryan Sharp told her that 'when we see something like that, we turn around,' according to the complaint. When Brock asked if county officials see people during the flights, Sharp told her yes, according to the complaint, but added that 'we don't put that in the camera footage.'

UCF student sues to stop Trump from stripping Venezuelans of legal protections
UCF student sues to stop Trump from stripping Venezuelans of legal protections

Yahoo

time21-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

UCF student sues to stop Trump from stripping Venezuelans of legal protections

A University of Central Florida student is among seven Venezuelans suing the Trump administration in federal court, arguing they should be able to stay legally in the United States. Cecilia Gonzalez, whose family fled the economically-ravaged country ruled by socialist strongman Nicolas Maduro in 2017, is a plaintiff in a lawsuit filed Wednesday by the ACLU Foundation of Northern California in San Francisco. The suit seeks to rescind Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's decision earlier this month to strip 600,000 Venezuelans in the U.S. of the temporary protected status, or TPS, which allows them to legally be in the country, hold jobs and avoid deportation. 'I cried for myself, for my family, and for the many friends that I have that rely on TPS for their survival,' Gonzalez wrote in her plaintiff's declaration about her reaction to Noem's decision. 'It was like having the ground disappear beneath my feet. … I would be terrified to return to Venezuela,' wrote the Kissimmee resident. Venezuelan refugees in Florida face deportation after Trump revokes protections The suit claims Noem has no authority to revoke the decision by her predecessor, Alejandro Mayorkas, to extend the protected status originally granted to Venezuelan refugees by President Joe Biden in 2021. Noem's decision means Gonzalez and nearly 80,000 other Venezuelans in Central Florida can be deported when their status expires in either April or September. Gonzalez, who is at risk of losing her TPS on Sept. 10, lives with her parents and younger brother and is an applicant on her parents' 'long-pending asylum application,' the suit states. She expects to graduate with a bachelor's degree from UCF in May. She and the six other plaintiffs are part of the National TPS Alliance, which represents TPS holders across the country. 'These individuals cannot return safely to their country of origin,' the suit states. 'They represent the diverse population of Venezuelans who have relied on TPS to provide them the most basic forms of human security—a stable place to live and a chance to work for a living during this time of severe crisis in Venezuela.' Gonzalez and other Venezuelans in the country are 'educators, laborers, caretakers, and advocates; parents, students, and children,' the suit states. 'They live all across the country, with homes, families, jobs, and deep community ties,' the suit states. 'If Secretary Noem's TPS termination goes into effect, they will be subject to deportation yet unable to return safely to their home country; and without legal authorization to live or work in the United States.' Trump campaigned on plans for 'mass deportation' of illegal immigrants but said he would 'start with the criminals.' White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said last month, however, that no undocumented immigrant was 'off the table.' A Miami man told CBS News that his Venezuelan wife, who had an upcoming immigration court date, was 'snatched' in an immigration raid on Jan. 26. The lawsuit claims federal law does not allow an administration to cut short a TPS period. It also disputes what it claims is the assumption by Trump, Noem, Vice President JD Vance and others in the administration that TPS is 'illegal.' Federal agents are rounding up migrants in Florida, but specifics are spotty. Here's what we know. The plaintiffs also argue Noem's actions were 'motivated at least in part by racial animus,' citing her calling Venezuelan TPS holders 'dirtbags' when she announced her decision on Fox News. In 2024, Noem made similar claims when she wrote on X, 'Venezuela didn't send us their best. They emptied their prisons and sent criminals to America. Deportations need to start on DAY ONE of [Trump's] term.' Those statements were just part of 'a torrent of similar racist statements that Secretary Noem, President Trump, and members of the Trump campaign and administration have made to attack and marginalize nonwhite immigrants generally, and the Venezuelan TPS community in particular,' the suit states. Gonzalez said in her declaration that she stopped looking into graduate school programs after learning she might not be able to remain in the country. 'It is exhausting to live with such uncertainty,' she wrote. 'My brain is constantly worried about my future, and at the same time, I am also on edge in my day to day activities.' But, she added, 'I am trying to find ways to move forward, and for me, that has beencontinuing advocating for my community. I find comfort knowing that my skills and passion can help the bigger cause.' The suit did not appear to hamper Noem's actions on TPS. On Thursday afternoon, the Wall Street Journal reported she plans to revoke similar legal protections for Haitians.

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