San Francisco Police Spent 193 Hours Over 3 Months Watching Private Surveillance Footage
The surveillance yielded 49 arrests, of which 42 were for possession or sale of narcotics.

In 2022, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance that would allow the city's police department to access footage from private security cameras under certain circumstances. A new city report sheds light on just how much the police have used the privilege.
Between 2021 and 2022, news reports depicted a wave of "smash-and-grab" retail thefts across California. San Francisco Mayor London Breed complained that city policy did not allow police to access security camera footage during emergency situations. "Where there were multiple robbery crews hitting multiple stores, [police] couldn't even access those cameras, which is ridiculous," Breed said in December 2021.
"There is a balance to be had, I know," she noted. "But right now, if our officers cannot use cameras during a mass looting event, then that policy is out of balance."
The following year, at Breed's urging, the city government implemented a 15-month pilot program in which the San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) could "temporarily live monitor activity during exigent circumstances, significant events with public safety concerns, and investigations relating to active misdemeanor and felony violations." Investigators would need the camera owner's "express consent," but they could access the feed live for up to 24 hours after receiving access.
As part of the ordinance, the SFPD would compile quarterly reports detailing how many times it requested access to video footage and for how long. The report released in January shows that in the third quarter of 2023, covering July through September, SFPD made 34 requests to view private footage, all of which were approved. All told, 51 officers and 13 sergeants spent a collective 193 hours and 19 minutes monitoring live surveillance footage—the equivalent of more than eight full days in a three-month period.
Despite being touted as a method to disrupt mass retail theft, 29 out of the 34 requests were for narcotics investigations. Police made 49 arrests as a result of surveillance, of which 42 were for narcotics—including possession or sale of opiates, heroin, methamphetamine, etc.—while two were for homicide, four were for "theft/larceny," and one was for "delaying, or obstructing peace officer duties" in connection with possessing or receiving stolen property.
Interestingly, all of the requests stemmed from just five census tracts—plots of land that cover about 4,000 residents on average.
The report is anonymized, excluding any information about the camera owners "to decrease the likelihood that they may face retaliation related to criminal investigations." But there is still enough to be able to draw certain conclusions.
"By far the longest monitoring session was during the Outside Lands Music Festival in August in Golden Gate Park, when officers watched 42 total hours of live footage," the San Francisco Chronicle noted in its review of the available data. "Police were able to make five arrests for theft, pickpocketing and resisting an officer during that time, but it's unclear what other use police had for the nearly two consecutive days of live media feeds during the festival."
Further, "only one of those five arrests led the district attorney's office to file charges."
Proponents may point to the arrests as evidence of the policy's success, even apart from the two homicide suspects. Immediately after taking office in 2022, District Attorney Brooke Jenkins backed Breed's proposal for what became the pilot program. "This policy can help address the existence of open-air drug markets fueling the sale of the deadly drug fentanyl," Jenkins noted. "Drug dealers are destroying people's lives and wreaking havoc on neighborhoods like the Tenderloin," one of the five census tracts represented in the report.
But it's not clear whether the same results could have been achieved without giving police real-time access to private cameras.
"The need for greater transparency…is crucial to truly evaluate the impact that access to live surveillance has had on policing," write Saira Hussain and Matthew Guariglia of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "In particular, the SFPD's data fails to make clear how live surveillance helps police prevent or solve crimes in a way that footage after the fact does not."
But rather than erring on the side of caution, San Francisco is openly embracing further surveillance: The city is rolling out new traffic cameras, which are more effective at filling government coffers than preventing traffic fatalities.
Next month, city residents will be able to vote on Proposition E, which would "permit the [SFPD] to use Surveillance Technology for at least one year" before the city government could disallow it. As one city employee said at a November 2023 meeting of the Board of Supervisors, the SFPD would "have a one-year pilot period to experiment, to work through new technology to see how they work," apparently making San Franciscans into guinea pigs for the surveillance state.
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How to do journalism, Joe.
Tell us how many CONVICTIONS resulted.
Absolutely. Arrests mean nothing.
Or how does it stack up against just having police? One arrest for every 5 manhours compared to the average of what for a beat cop plus sergeants citywide? How many went to trial for manhour comparisons there and so on to convictions. That way you can see if they are effective or not and focusing on the right things or not.
I get that Reason is pro crime and pro criminal but this fails to be meaningful even for that.
San Francisco Police Spent 193 Hours Over 3 Months Watching Private Surveillance Footage
So... if I do my quick table napkin math, not a whole lot of time was spent watching private surveillance.
I like my police-abuse-of-power-outrage-righteousness-fix, but if they solved 2 homicides in 193 hours with permission from the camera owners… I mean surely they shot a dog or something…right?
I think the big shock here is that San Francisco arrested someone. I mean... the NERVE!
Police never needed this law to review surveillance with permission. The claims made by Breed in 2021 were flat false.
What this actually allows is the police to review surveillance without a warrant or even a subpoena. By the way, the prior law also allowed reviews without a warrant - it just required the use to be for "exigent circumstances". The 2022 change removed even that minimal constraint.
Are you saying this 'Investigators would need the camera owner's "express consent,"' is incorrect?
About 3 hours for each person.
I wonder why Joe's mentioning "arrests"? We all that it's catch and release in San Fran.
64 cops, 192 hours, 91 days.
So, on average, every week day, but not weekends or national holidays, one cop would watch 3 hours of video
"In my cabin is a device that will make you invincible."
Leftists aping the Stasi? Say it ain't so!
But why would cops even be looking at drug infractions? Drugs were legalized in San Francisco and countless other locales across the US, leading to the sudden Fentanyl tragedy and demonstrating why legalization was a terrible idea doomed to fail! Legal weed was the trojan horse for Fentanyl! At least that's what I keep reading in the conservative media...
*"This policy can help address the existence of open-air drug markets fueling the sale of the deadly drug fentanyl[,]"*
Definitely the 'open-air markets' and totally not the Iron Law of Prohibition 'fueling' sales of ever-stronger and cheaper drugs. I hear private sales ('closed-air markets', as LE calls them) aren't subject to economic laws, but then freedom is a very risky privilege for the state to extend. With the dearth of violent crimes, what would the cops do all day?
*"Drug dealers are destroying people's lives and wreaking havoc on neighborhoods like the Tenderloin[...]"*
Now do the liquor store on every corner. Many of them are pretty seedy and frequented by some pretty rugged characters. And since people...uh, helpless victims...are obviously at the mercy of the evil booze pushers and bear no control or responsibility for their own actions, we'd better shutter them, too and make an example of those sociopathic booze traffickers. Look at the deaths and suffering and addiction they've caused!
"At least that’s what I keep reading in the conservative media…"
I'm guessing that you've never once read conservative media except accidently, and your opinions are formed wholly by MSNBC commentators.
How else are the cops supposed to get their cut?
So my outrage meter is hovering around 3 on this one. It doesn't look like the cops are spending a whole lot of time on this and if they identified a homicide suspect the city might be better off. And if I understand it correctly the video would already have been available to the cops, with a warrant presumably, after the fact so your privacy could have been compromised in any case. The only advantage to watching live video is that it might allow the cops to respond more quickly to a serious crime. If they're mostly using it for petty drug war arrests well, that's just cops being cops. They can do the same thing standing on a street corner.
This city has a problematic police chief who has shown a pattern in believing more toys will solve the problems he has failed to fix. Remember a few years when he aggressively and relentlessly pursued a police robot with lethal capabilities. Chief Scott needs an audit.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/07/us/san-francisco-rejects-police-controlled-robots/index.html
Why would any sane person ever live in such an authoritarian nightmare?
Lisbon, Portugal has a bridge that looks like the golden gate bridge and has trolley cars and hills. The coast of Portugal looks very similar, but you don't need to deal with all the BS. Portugal lived under a dictatorship and got rid of it. California was once free, but seems to want this authoritarian nightmare.
From a libertarian perspective, it seems to me that arguing against a private owner of a security camera granting the police access to their property belies gross imbecility. If the cops came to me and asked to set up surveillance on someone for a good reason, and I let them do it, would Reason be against that too? If I download files from my Ring camera and give them to the police, would Reason object? If it is my property, I should be able to do what I want with it within the bounds of the law. That seems to be the libertarian perspective. Reason isn't so much libertarian anymore as much as they are just plain pro crime and pro criminal. They are hardcore lefties in anything but name.
If it is my property, I should be able to do what I want with it within the bounds of the law.
If it only shows what's happening on your property, OK.
Your freedom to film something doesn't end at your property line. One has no reasonable expectation of privacy for activities which they're engaged in the open street.
Same reason if you're at the park with your kids, and you're filming their precious moments as they take turns on the monkey bars, and it just so happens you capture a criminal act in the background of your filming - there's no reason at all why you shouldn't be able to turn that over to the cops if you think it'll help. Or why cops shouldn't be able to request your consent in turning it over.
Or in public or plainly viewable from that vantage unaided. Now It would be a problem if they asked to use my drone to look in a warehouse skylight but standing at my window on the 5th story of a nearby highrise and looking down for the same is different (assuming I let them in of course)
"DRUGS!!!"
OK, so let's go through this step by step.
1) During exigent circumstances.
2) During significant events with public safety concerns.
3) Investigations relating to active MisD/Felony violations.
4) 1-3 are temporary permissions.
What's objectionable about any of that? For example: Hostages are being held (1); a mass shooting is occuring (2); a crime has occurred and the criminal is active and at large in a known location (3). Those all seem like a reasonable basis for temporarily getting access to security feeds.
5) Express consent is required.
And it even has an added layer, meaning they can't do that without the security feed owner's permission. Meaning if a private citizen wants to help the police by providing them an investigative tool they have at their disposal, they can. What's objectionable about that?
6) In a three month period, they only made 34 requests. Not a lot. One every three days, give or take. And, given the 24hr cap, they only used an average of 8hrs of their allotment (probably a lot less, given how much manpower it was spread out over - and yes, I'll get to the OLMF later).
So, they're using this ability with a pretty obviously focused approach. Just what they need to address criminal activity, nothing more.
What's objectionable about that?
7) They bagged mostly a lot of druggie scumbags, but not as much retail theft as they hoped.
And this is a problem because? I mean, hey - it didn't serve its original intent very well, but they found a great alternative purpose for it. What's objectionable about that?
8) They spent a disproportionate amount of time watching OLMF.
Weird, but it still bore some fruit. I guess maybe they some suspicions about what my occur there, and OLMF assauaged them by giving consent to their feeds. Which illustrated that OLMF wasn't up to anything untoward.
Don't see how that's not a win.
So, let's put it all together then. The dorks at the EFF claim that it didn't help anything, even though it obviously did (49 arrests, after pretty limited and targeted use). Then there's this odd conflation with traffic cameras - which has nothing to do with what's being discussed and is an entirely separate issue - as well as the obligatory fearmongering of a "surveillance state", which nobody can say with a straight face when we're talking about limited-access in pre-approved situations and only with express consent.
Be honest Joe - are you just upset because it threatens open air drug markets? And if so, why didn't you just SAY that and be honest about the whole thing from the get-go?
Is it because you can't actually defend the existence of open air drug markets, so instead you'll try to rationalize an objection to that which threatens them?
Much is written about the philosophy and psychological effects of surveillance; here’a taste.
https://lithub.com/how-fear-of-government-surveillance-influences-our-behavior/