RCMP investigate an Edmonton Police Service attempt to frame a journalist critical of the coming panopticon:
Diotte cited statistics that showed speed cameras raised a lot of money for police butled to an increase, not a decrease, in accidents. “In 2001 alone, city police issued 194,500 speeding tickets,” Diotte wrote. “Photo radar and red-light cameras raise about $14 million annually for police. Yet last year fatal collisions jumped to 32 from 20 in 2002.”
“You know, I know and the police know that driver error is the main reason crashes occur,” Diotte continued. “All the photo radar in the world is not going to correct that core problem.”
Two days later, Newton ordered Sergeant Randy Schreiner to access confidential police databases to gather information on Diotte. The database produced a descriptions and details of Diotte’s automobile and home. Diotte has no history of drunk-driving.
Using the database information, Newton ordered officers to be on the lookout for Diotte’s BMW convertible during a “Target All Drunk Drivers” operation meeting on November 18. Sergeant Glen Hayden then informed Newton that he had seen Diotte at the Overtime Bar on two occasions. Around 6pm that evening, Hayden went to the Overtime, saw Diotte’s BMW and called in undercover surveillance from two officers who were part of a squad designed to target a list of 100 “aggressive drivers.”
The undercover officers identified Diotte and Ignasiak inside the bar as “Target One” and “Target Two” according to witnesses. Around 8:45pm an “informant” at the bar called officer Darren Smith, who placed a lookout bulletin on Diotte.
Diotte, whom witnesses say was not drunk, took a cab home.
Politechbot reports that
some pesky journalists happened to have police scanners and blew the lid off of the operation
Good thing someone’s watching the watchmen… but I wonder how long it will stay legal?