TheStar.com | Crime | Security camera captures man’s murder
“Investigators congregated at a west end auto body shop today after discovering that its security camera recorded the city’s latest homicide.”
In this newspaper account we find that a store security camera captured a murder in front of the store. Last year, also in Toronto, another shooter was caught on video in front of an apartment shooting into the lobby. As it becomes increasingly normal to expect that private video cameras will be focused on public spaces, more and more crimes are likely to be captured on these devices – making them effectively an extension of public video surveillance. The argument for public surveillance has been public security.
The increasing number of cases like this suggest that prior studies about the ineffectiveness of video capture as a preventative measure are being borne out. This leaves the argument that the cameras are useful, after the fact, for identifying, apprehending and arresting suspects. This may or may not be the case, but it is certainly the case that if cameras are only useful for capturing criminals, then they do not provide increased security.
In other words it is not privacy vs. security (a false dichotomy in any event). In fact, it is privacy vs. retribution and is this a trade-off that we should be making in our public spaces?