From aerial surveillance in Baltimore to national terrorist watch lists, local police departments experimented with novel approaches to securing their streets following 9/11. Watch '9/11 Twenty Years Later—The Longest Shadow' on ABCNewsLive and hulu.
On the streets of Baltimore, where crime proliferates in the poorest neighborhoods and economic desperation can run thick, the blue cast made it feel like one of those science-fiction movies set in a dark future of robots in control.
Critics say these neighborhoods coated in blue also represent something else: the failures of an overzealous surveillance state, militarized and armed to the hilt in the years since terrorists attacked the nation on Sept. 11, 2001. Police departments across the country, eager to avoid the failures that led to 9/11, scrambled to equip officers with the latest in military equipment and technology -- much of it made available by a federal government that would spend almostin Afghanistan and Iraq. And the police forces -- always eager to hire military veterans -- were being staffed by people trained to police populations under occupation, not communities on the home front who get to decide how they want to be governed.
Over time, critics of these methods say that the trauma suffered by heavily policed communities -- and the toll on residents' civil liberties -- have done more harm than good. As protests erupted across the country in the wake ofin 2020, the gap between police departments and the citizens they are sworn to protect had never seemed wider.
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