A woman has filed a lawsuit against the District of Columbia Housing Authority and the police department, challenging a network of security cameras that she said has resulted in “a severe invasion of residents’ privacy in their most sacred places.” The suit filed on Dec. 12 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia describes how the housing authority began installing the security cameras at the Highland Dwellings complex in 2017, including on the home of plaintiff Schyla Pondexter-Moore.
According to the lawsuit, DCHA has a total network of 650 cameras at all of its complexes. The lawsuit calls the cameras a “massive surveillance program” that gives DCHA and D.C. police access into the private lives of public housing residents. “As soon as Schyla Pondexter-Moore (“Plaintiff” or “Ms. Pondexter-Moore”) steps outside her home, she knows she is being watched,” the first line of the lawsuit reads. The lawsuit challenges the “unconstitutional surveillance network of over eighty cameras on nearly 200 homes” at Highland Dwellings that could capture “intimate details” on public housing residents there. The suit said that the cameras constantly monitor people that live there, and the footage has been given to D.C. police to break up “lawful activities,” such as dice games. 
This week, the Clinic filed a lawsuit against DC’s public housing authority, alleging that DCHA uses an unconstitutional network of cameras to surveil the District’s public housing residents.
— Civil Rights Clinic @ Georgetown Law (@gulccivilrights) December 15, 2022
The suit is seeking compensatory damages and for the city to remove the cameras on the Highland Dwellings property. The D.C. Housing Authority has been the subject of criticism over the last few months following a report from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, which found unsafe and unsanitary conditions at some public housing units in the city. DCHA did not return a request for comment.
