DHS To Install Infrared Sensors Along ‘Entire Border Of The United States’
Tuesday, May 21, 2013 8:51
I want to thank friends at Vigilant Citizen for an email bringing this story from Government Security News to
my attention. From GSN Daily’s Homeland Security Insider we learn of
plans to place infrared sensors along the entire border of the United
States of America. My bet is, by the time they do it, they’ll outline
the entire continent of North America, thereby creating one massive
‘prison’ and fullfilling their dreams of a North American Union. Will
these devices one day be used to both keep people out, and keep people
in? Will this infrared sensor border be our very own Berlin Wall? From
GSNews.:
Mon, 2013-05-20 04:19 PM
In a procurement document in which it disclosed its plans to purchase
additional GS-100 Passive Infrared Sensors for use along the
U.S.-Mexican border, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) indicated
that the existing surveillance system that deploys these PIR sensors
spans “the entire border of the United States.”
That disclosure may constitute greater specificity about the widespread
use of these infrared sensors, which can detect a pedestrian passing up
to 100 feet away, than CBP has previously made public. In a procurement
document in which it disclosed its plans to purchase additional GS-100
Passive Infrared Sensors for use along the U.S.-Mexican border, U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) indicated that the existing
surveillance system that deploys these PIR sensors spans “the entire
border of the United States.”
“The GS‐100 Passive Infrared Sensor (PIRS) is an intrusion detector
that responds to infrared energy radiated by pedestrians or vehicles
within its field of view,” explain Vortex Systems on its Web site.
“Depending on the temperature difference between the subject and the
background, useful range of detection for a short‐range sensor is 100
feet for pedestrians. It produces a signal when it senses the movement
of heat sources. The unit is utilized for remote detection of vehicles
and people.”
“The unit offers a nominal detection range up to 100 feet for illegals crossing into the United States,” said CBP.
Further information about this sensor contract is available from Agnieszka Frys, a contracting officer, at 202-344-2542 or aga.frys@dhs.gov.
Related Stories
No comments:
Post a Comment