Officials Warn Facebook and Twitter Increase Police Vulnerability

By Mike Levine

Published May 10, 2011

FoxNews.com

 

In the midst of what officials call an "appalling" and "alarming spike" in
attacks on law enforcement around the country, officials are warning the
success of sites such as
<http://www.foxnews.com/topics/facebook.htm#r_src=ramp> Facebook and
<http://www.foxnews.com/topics/twitter.htm#r_src=ramp> Twitter has made
police even more vulnerable.

While police have for some time used social networking sites to identify and
investigate suspected criminals, now criminals are using such sites to
identify and investigate law enforcement officers, including undercover
police. In addition, hostage-takers and suspects who barricade themselves in
buildings are monitoring social media to track police movements in real
time, and gang members are launching their own surveillance operations
targeting police.

Social media "will be used against you," Lauri Stevens -- organizer of this
week's Social Media, Internet and Law Enforcement conference in Chicago --
promised police officials who have gathered from across the country and
overseas to swap ideas over harnessing the changing media environment and
protecting against its dangers.

After police first discovered a DVD inside a suspect's car in October,
Phoenix authorities issued a "security alert," telling law enforcement
officials that officers were being "targeted" on Facebook and that posting
photographs and other personal information on social media "may create
serious officer safety consequences."

It also may create serious safety consequences for the friends and family,
including young children, of officers who appear in many of the photos on
DVDs recovered by authorities, conference attendees were told Tuesday.

"They have brought those dangers right to their families," said Phoenix
detective CJ Wren, noting that when officers create Facebook or Twitter
accounts they need to realize, "It's my life, it's my family's life."

"Social networking is supposed to be fun ... but you've got to take that
extra step now when you are in this business," he told law enforcement
officers. "You can have your Facebook locked down as tight as you possible
can, but if your friend's not doing it, you're compromised."

As for the DVDs, Phoenix police still don't have a full handle on who
produced them or how many were distributed, Wren said. The investigation
continues.

Meanwhile, an official from the Milwaukee, Wis., police department noted
that some "criminal elements" now monitor social media while they're in the
middle of holding a hostage or barricading themselves inside a building.

"It used to be that all you did was cut the power to the structure where the
person was holed up and you didn't have to worry about it anymore," said
Anne Schwartz, the Milwaukee police department's communications director.
"But now, we're finding that people who are taking hostages, people that are
barricaded, people that want to kill the police are looking at the Twitter
sites, they're looking at Facebook ... because the media like to get on and
talk about things as they are happening."

Schwartz cited the case of a December standoff on Interstate 94 in Wisconsin
that lasted hours, as a gunman who allegedly stole an SUV refused to
surrender. Local news outlets aired live video of armed police hiding behind
a door and aired live video of snipers getting into what was supposed to be
a secret position, according to Schwartz. All of that information can end up
on social media almost instantaneously.

"The element of surprise is everything, and social media is taking away the
element of surprise that we need to keep people safe when we have tactical
situations," Schwartz said.

Officials also mentioned other ways social media can hurt law enforcement
personnel. A gang expert from Albany, N.Y., said gangs in his area are
actively conducting "surveillance" operations on police using their mobile
devices, and many officials noted that sites like Facebook and Twitter can
turn private videos into "viral" sensations.

Nick Selby, a Dallas-area police officer and information security analyst,
reflected the threat this way: "I work in Texas. I assume everybody has a
gun, [and] I assume everybody has some kind of personal recording device on
them."

Wren, the Phoenix detective, worried that such videos add public-perception
pressures to police departments and their officers, who could end up being
"just a little less effective" as a result.

"When you start worrying about what the perception is, you may second guess
that extra second, and that could be an officer safety issue," Wren said.

Despite all the concerns over officer safety, though, organizers of the
Chicago conference -- dubbed the "SMILE conference" -- urged law enforcement
officers to look at social media more as a tool than a threat.

"It isn't all roses, but hopefully you'll become convinced that the good
outweighs the potential negative," Stevens told the police officials in
attendance. "It's a huge force multiplier, especially in these economic
times where you're losing officers or you're not replacing them as they
quit. ... This is a way to make yourselves bigger."

Throughout the conference, officers shared stories of how using social media
benefited their departments.

Billy Grogan, the chief of police in Dunwoody, Ga., outside Atlanta, often
posts messages and information to his department's Twitter and Facebook
accounts. He said doing that helps gain community trust by establishing
daily interactions with the public and by reflecting a policy of
transparency. He said using social media also keeps the public informed
about events unfolding in their community, and it offers a way to "debunk"
myths or rumors and promote "feel good type stories."

Other officials cited similar benefits, and Schwartz, the Milwaukee
communications director, called social media a "vital part" of her
"toolkit."

Judging from the SMILE conference, departments in the United Kingdom are at
the forefront of using social media to benefit community policing.

As an example of the benefits, Phil Knox, an inspector with the Northern
<http://www.foxnews.com/topics/ireland.htm#r_src=ramp> Ireland Police, said
that after his department reported on Facebook that police would be on
patrol during a federal holiday, a woman posted a thank-you online. In her
post, the woman said that "seeing you about" gave her "peace of mind." But,
Knox noted, the woman hadn't actually seen any police. Instead, there was a
"perceived visibility" based on what was posted on social media, he said.

Still, a top police official from Scotland, Gordon Scobbie, said concerns
raised for police at the conference were "a really, really good wake up
call," and he would be taking those warnings back to the United Kingdom with
him.

In the  <http://www.foxnews.com/topics/u.s.htm#r_src=ramp> United States,
many police departments are now contemplating what policies they should --
and legally can -- put into place when it comes to officers' use of social
media.

 

 



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