Summary form only given, as follows. A complete record of the panel discussion was not made available for publication as part of the conference proceedings but each of the five participants provides an abstract of their views. The field of ethics is concerned with the study of the concepts of right and wrong behavior, and generally involves three broad subject areas: metaethics, normative ethics, and applied ethics. Metaethics investigates where our ethical principles come from, and what they mean; normative ethics refer to our study and determination of moral standards that regulate right and wrong conduct; while applied ethics involves the examination of specific controversial issues such as abortion, animal rights, and environmental concerns. In this panel, we will identify and discuss ethics issues as they apply to a number of emergent challenges in the design and development of intelligence analysis systems, as well as during day-to-day operations of law enforcement and military officers. In many discussions on ethics, there is a tendency for the discussions to remain at a high level and surround the main principles of ethics, e.g., respect for autonomy, non-maleficence or do no harm, beneficence, and justice (Beauchamp & Childress, 2013). In this panel, we present some concrete problems that emerged through our research in projects such as the FP7 VALCRI, as we seek to respect the rights of European citizens to liberty and security. These problems include the mosaic effect, protection of personal data, potential misuse and abuse during information exploitation and analysis activities encountered during intelligence and investigative analysis. How should we design to ensure computational and analytic transparency in the decision making processes? How do we design systems and processes that are visible and open to inspection by colleagues and overseers? These are some issues that will be addressed by this Panel.