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Privacy United States Technology

Secretive Surveillance Company Is Selling Cops Cameras Hidden In Gravestones (vice.com) 52

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: A surveillance vendor that works with U.S. government agencies, such as the FBI, DEA, and ICE, is marketing spying capabilities to local police departments, including cameras that are hidden inside a tombstone, a baby car seat, and a vacuum cleaner. The brochure highlights some of the capabilities on offer to law enforcement agencies, from the novel to the sometimes straight-up bizarre. Special Services Group, the vendor behind the brochure, does not advertise its products publicly. Its logo is the floating-eye-in-pyramid logo seen on the back of the $1 bill, which conspiracy theorists associate with the Illuminati, and the company's slogan is "Constant Vigilance." The company is so secretive that, when asked for comment for this story, it threatened VICE with legal action if we published this article.

The brochure, dubbed "Black Book" by its authors, contains a cornucopia of surveillance devices. "The Tombstone Cam is our newest video concealment offering the ability to conduct remote surveillance operations from cemeteries," one section of the Black Book reads. The device can also capture audio, its battery can last for two days, and "the Tombstone Cam is fully portable and can be easily moved from location to location as necessary," the brochure adds. Another product is a video and audio capturing device that looks like an alarm clock, suitable for "hotel room stings," and other cameras are designed to appear like small tree trunks and rocks, the brochure reads. Other products include more traditional surveillance cameras and lenses as well as tools for surreptitiously gaining entry to buildings. The "Phantom RFID Exploitation Toolkit" lets a user clone an access card or fob, and the so-called "Shadow" product can "covertly provide the user with PIN code to an alarm panel," the brochure reads.

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Secretive Surveillance Company Is Selling Cops Cameras Hidden In Gravestones

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  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @08:01PM (#59605104)

    smoke detector hidden hd spy camera

    https://deals.slashdot.org/sal... [slashdot.org]

    • Most slashdotters have one of those, but they can't get anybody who isn't related to visit them.

  • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @08:11PM (#59605114)

    Your dead grandpa ratted me out, I'm gonna kill you!

  • when asked for comment for this story, it threatened VICE with legal action if we published this article.

    Noone is without merit...

    • Well, I am not surprised as some of these look like standard ELP camera modules like the one I used for my daughter's instructables recording rig: https://primus.kot-begemot.co.... [kot-begemot.co.uk]

      To be more exact, they use the one I use for my own DIY CCTV concealed setups: https://www.amazon.co.uk/ELP-W... [amazon.co.uk]

      Looking at theirs they have the same lock ring and lens setup as on most ELPs. I suspect they are priced with 2 zeroes at the end though. Exactly as in the closing sequence of Small Soldiers (add a few zeroes to the p

      • Just 2 zeroes? I mean, it is a 'secret' brochure targeting law enforcement, with unlimited siezed dollars to spend discretionarily. The secret is the inflated prices, not the existence of cheap Chinese surveilance gear resellers. --- a USA citizen where civil forfeiture is a thing.

  • by reanjr ( 588767 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @08:47PM (#59605186) Homepage

    How much actual crime happens within camera distance of a tombstone? Sounds like someone has seen too many movies.

    • Re:Too many movies (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @09:22PM (#59605248) Journal
      You're kidding, right? It's for tracking people everywhere they go.
      You do understand that your typical control-freak, anal-retentive 'law enforcement' type wants a world where everyone is followed everywhere they go, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, cradle-to-grave, don't you? No, I'm not paranoid, and no, I'm far from the only person who has been seeing this as a growing trend for years and decades now, and yes your politicians know about it and are perfectly okay with it, because they either want everyone watched, or they actually believe this crap will somehow reduce crime. It's just more trading of freedom and privacy for a false sense of security, meanwhile thugs with badges and guns have more and more control over everyone else -- including, yes, you.
      • Re:Too many movies (Score:5, Interesting)

        by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @10:16PM (#59605374) Homepage

        You left out the bit, where whilst they want to track everything you do, they want to hide everything they do. It seems like they won't be able to manage the last part because we can use those tools on a distributed basis to track them. So now they are pushing privacy laws because they want to continue to hide their corruption. Junk Yard Dog Law Enforcers, what do they do with their cameras when they want to break the law, turn them off, you get the idea.

        I am thinking distributed tracking of government officials probably a good idea, you know a web site, where you post a photo of your corrupt politician when you spot them, take a photo upload it and get points, keep snapping away so we know where the corrupt fuckers are at all times. No privacy for elected officials.

        • We do have to be better than they are, though, but in this post-Trump era I do believe that for instance there needs to be campaign policy reforms to the tune of a very comprehensive deep-dive into any political candidates' life, especially their finances, so we know exactly who and what they are, and deeper fact-checking of what they say when campaigning; we need to stop electing people based on outright lies. Might also be a good idea to track what they promise campaigning versus what they actually do whi
    • If you've got a thug who just bought the ranch, then LEOs will be very interested to learn about the thug's circle of acquaintances, and they can start mapping that circle of acquaintances by recording audio & video & license plate numbers & cetera of everyone who drops by the cemetery to offer their respects.

      That could be at the funeral proper, or many years later, at, say, midnight on an anniversary of the thug's birth [and the tomb camera will just keep taking pictures & taking pictures
      • by ftobin ( 48814 )

        It's not helpful to over-hype the capabilities that the camera can do: the battery in the Tombstone cam lasts two days:

        "The Tombstone Cam is our newest video concealment offering the ability to conduct remote surveillance operations from cemeteries," one section of the Black Book reads. The device can also capture audio, its battery can last for two days, and "the Tombstone Cam is fully portable and can be easily moved from location to location as necessary,"

        • Tombstones are heavy. It could easy contain a car battery which would power that thing for a month. Or bury a bunch of car batteries in the grave and have it run for a year.

          Ok ok perhaps I'm getting just a little paranoid here.

          • Solar panels are still rather noticeable [although in another five or ten years, they might be sufficiently camouflage-able to blend into the background, which is kinduva scary thought], but the LEOs could conceivably run a low-voltage line [like you use for very dim outdoor lighting] to the fake tombstone and be able to power the camera & its SSD drive.

            Low voltage lines can be more or less pushed into the ground just a few inches, whereas a standard 15-amp 120V line would need to be buried deep, in a
            • "for all I know, they may already have ethernet over low-voltage cable"

              It's called PoE.

              There are also standards for running Ethernet over AC power lines, like homelink. There's no need for it to be low voltage.

    • Hate crimes where certain ethnicities / religions tomb stones are attacked. Revenge desecration of rival gangs dead members. There's all kinds of activity, not mention drug deals etc occuring.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The empty grave in use is used as bulk storage.
      The new grave has a very, very heavy coffin? 2 for 1 use.
      Two criminals "meet" over two "friends" graves that just happen to be next to each other?
    • Well, you see the undead rising and going back to sleep, might be creepy, but some people are into that!!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Some utter scum seem to think that desecrating graveyards is funny, they're dead so what's the problem. Not so funny when you arrive to find your loved ones final resting place looking like a trash heap, covered in garbage, spray paint on the stone and divets dug out of the earth over their bodies like someone was trying to dig down to the coffin. The one place you expect to be left alone is your final bed six-feet down, not have some bunch of bored, mindless scumbags come along and ruin memorials to good

    • How much actual crime happens within camera distance of a tombstone?

      Hey, there's serious stuff going on there. People are stealing flowers off each other's graves.

  • From their website (Score:5, Informative)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @08:57PM (#59605202)

    Special Services Group supplies technical solutions for law enforcement, military, government, and select clients.

    Yeah, yeah. Select clients.

    Pretty much the same people that sell crap to private detectives. And private detective wanna-bees. And people who want to stalk ex-wives and girlfriends. There is nothing exotic or special about the stuff they sell to law enforcement. Other than higher prices.

  • "the Tombstone Cam is fully portable and can be easily moved from location to location as necessary," Oh, but wasn't Mr. XXX over on the east side of the grave yard last week? That's hilarious.
  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday January 09, 2020 @09:38PM (#59605296) Homepage Journal

    Some of those that work forces
    Are the same that burn crosses.

    Or bug cemeteries.

    Surveillance society would be great if the people watching the cameras weren't part of the problem.

    But since they are, it's a moral imperative to blind the cams.

  • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Thursday January 09, 2020 @09:44PM (#59605306) Journal

    Their lawyers use all caps ... they must be important bigshots who are to be obeyed without question.

  • Andy Warhol's grave [earthcam.com]

    Naive Carnegie Mellon students used to think that Andrew [wikipedia.org] was named after Andrew Carnegie.

    Of course it was actually named after Andy Warhol.

  • by Johnny Mnemonic ( 176043 ) <mdinsmore@g m a i l .com> on Thursday January 09, 2020 @11:11PM (#59605472) Homepage Journal
    âoe The company is so secretive that, when asked for comment for this story, it threatened VICE with legal action if we published this article. âoe Will they never learn? Streisand effect, etc.
  • by 6Yankee ( 597075 ) on Friday January 10, 2020 @01:49AM (#59605630)

    This thing is the size of a tombstone and can only power its camera for two days?

  • And not their privacy or anything we could "find" to harm them.

    But things they KNOW *they* are harming the general public with!

    Aka, they are a criminal organization, that just so happens to have found a few technically not illegal loopholes.

    Everybody knows their shit should be illegal, and them in prison, though.
    (Like it would be, e.g. in the EU.)

  • Get a hunting camera.

    And stick it on a tree near by. Battery lasts a long time, with infrared leds for night time.

    Put it 10-15 feet high, no one will notice.($70)

    https://www.amazon.com/Coolife... [amazon.com]

    And if you want vacuum cleaner surveillance (WTF!?) go with a micro camera ($35):

    https://www.amazon.com/PELDA-S... [amazon.com]

    The baby car seat concept is a new level of evil.

    I don't have any cameras of this nature, I have a dash cam, it has been very useful (for videos that are cool and catching stupid people).

  • You can find small OEM cameras that can be embedded into pretty much anything: https://www.aliexpress.com/who... [aliexpress.com] Technology advances in embedded wireless and battery technology will ensure that surveillance system technologies will proliferate. Cameras and listening devices everywhere!
  • by MitchDev ( 2526834 ) on Friday January 10, 2020 @07:51AM (#59605996)

    ... cops wonder why people don't like/trust them.....

  • "The Tombstone Cam..."

    "Sold!"

    "But I didn't even explain its features. It has..."

    "No need. I'll have 200 of them. Ship them to this address in Sunnydale, CA."

    • "The Tombstone Cam..."

      "Sold!"

      "But I didn't even explain its features. It has..."

      "No need. I'll have 200 of them. Ship them to this address in Sunnydale, CA."

      Buffy? Really? Heh! : )

  • Just wire it up. We'd like comcast cable to plot #3441, also run electric.
    Yea grandma's dead but we like to keep in touch.

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