Sunday, June 21, 2015

Recording Justice. Concerns arise about Police Body Cameras By Jaime Hellman.. June 19, 2015.

Recording justice: Concerns arise about police body cameras

Increasing use of body cameras by police officers raises privacy concerns

Body-worn cameras could revolutionize policing in America. The cameras, experts say, will hold both police and citizens more accountable for their actions. A recent report by the Department of Justice cites a study, conducted with California’s Rialto Police Department, showing that when officers wore body cameras, there was a 60 percent drop in use of force by police officers and an 88 percent drop in citizen complaints.
Since the death of Michael Brown, a black teenager killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, police departments around the nation have rushed to equip their officers with body-worn cameras to document police interactions with civilians. The Department of Justice announced a $20 million program this year to help police departments purchase cameras, which can cost as much as $600 each.
If they’re not paying attention — they’re looking at me, looking in my eyes — they won’t see it. And they’re not going know they’re recorded. I will not tell them.”
Albert Fargo
Police Officer, Chesapeake, VA Police Department
It’s boom times for the companies that sell the cameras. Taser International, known for its controversial nonlethal weapons, has become the leading manufacturer of body-worn cameras used by police. Taser’s sales of those cameras went from $3.8 million in 2012 to more than $57 million in 2014. Steve Tuttle, a spokesman for the company, says Taser has “41,000 thousand [body cameras] on the streets that we’ve built, and that’s as of the first quarter of 2015.”
Police body cameras are now in more than 5,000 of the nation’s 18,000 police departments, in cities such as New Orleans, Los Angeles and Chesapeake, Virginia. Chesapeake’s police were among the first in the nation to experiment with body cams, in 2008. Now 255 officers in the city use the cameras. It cost roughly $1,800 to outfit each officer, says Col. K.L. Wright, Chesapeake’s chief of police.
"Since we went full on into deploying the cameras on everyone who works in the field, [citizen] complaints have gone down about 44 percent,” says Chief Wright.
Police-office-on-patrol
Officer Albert Fargo of the Chesapeake Police Department on patrol.
Officer Albert Fargo, an 11-year veteran of the Chesapeake Police Department, says that when people know the camera is recording, they act differently. But he adds that many “people don’t see the camera. It’s very small. It’s on my shoulder. If they’re not paying attention — they’re looking at me, looking in my eyes — they won’t see it. And they’re not going know they’re recorded. I will not tell them.”
That raises some troubling questions about individual privacy and police body cameras, according to Jay Stanley, a privacy expert for the American Civil Liberties Union. He says, “Body cameras have a very real potential to invade a lot of people’s privacy. Police officers go into people’s homes. A significant proportion of police calls are for domestic violence. They’re seeing people at the worst moments of their lives. They’re seeing accident victims in cars as they die. There’s a lot of things that police officers see that you don’t want to end up on YouTube.”
And yet, he says, the ACLU is in favor of arming cops with body cameras. That’s because the cameras not only record interactions with civilians but also monitor the behavior of police officers. “There’s good reason to believe,” he says, “that if they’re done right, body cameras can really help this very serious, widespread problem we have of police abuse.”
Cop-keeping-bodycam
Officer Krystal A. Holland of the Chesapeake Police Department in Virginia docks her camera into a device that uploads recordings to an encrypted cloud-based site managed by Taser International.
Another problem is that because this technology is so new, policies and procedures differ widely from department to department about who can access the footage. For example, in Chesapeake, most police body-cam videos are kept completely inaccessible to the general public. But in Seattle the police department posts most of its recordings on YouTube after faces and other identifiers have been blurred out. In fact, Seattle is so transparent that, by request, citizens may view unredacted video of almost any DUI incident recorded by an officer.
Wright asks, if “your neighbor wants to see the video, does your neighbor have a right to see what took place in your house? I’m not so certain that they do.”
As body cameras become standard issue for more police officers around the country, we’re only beginning to understand the consequences of what it means to record everything.
Company-making-body-cameras

Body camera sales soar

Axon body cameras being assembled at Taser International in Scottsdale, Arizona. Taser’s sales of body cameras went from $3.8 million in 2012 to more than $57 million in 2014.
“Unfortunately, police officers are people,” says Fargo, “and they don’t always make the right decision. We just don’t, because we’re not perfect. And there’s probably going to be a time where the officer makes a bad decision — it’s on camera, and it’s going to protect the citizen. And there’s going to be time where the citizens don’t cooperate or act like they’re supposed to with the police, and it’s to protect the officer. So I think it goes both ways.” 

Libby Casey contributed to this article.

Sunday, January 04, 2015

Tampa Police to buy 60 Body Cameras for Pilot Program... Jan. 4, 2015, By Elizabeth Behrman, Tribune Staff..

Tampa police to buy 60 body cameras for pilot program

By 
Published: 
The police department is poised to take the next step in its eventual plan to equip all its officers with body-worn cameras.
Tampa officials will buy 60 cameras from Taser International for a pilot program to help the department develop policies and procedures for using the technology.
The $83,845 purchase and five-year contract with Taser International will go before the City Council on Thursday. If the purchase is approved by the council, the department will deploy the cameras as soon as it gets them, police spokeswoman Andrea Davis said.
Hopefully, she said, officers can start using them by the end of the month.
“The ultimate goal is for every officer to have a body camera, but through this pilot program and study we can learn what the capabilities are and where we can go from here,” Davis said.
The use of body cameras has been a topic of discussion for law enforcement officials for several years but was recently thrust onto the national stage after a white officer in Ferguson, Missouri, shot and killed an unarmed black man in August.
Many questioned what really happened between the police officer and 18-year-old Michael Brown before the shooting and said a body camera could have provided answers.
The Tampa Police Department has been researching body-worn cameras since last January, Davis said. The department requested information from various manufacturers in the spring and summer and asked for contract bids in the fall.
“It’s a very researched process,” Davis said. “Because when you’re spending this kind of money you want to take your time, and that’s what we did.”
Taser International — an Arizona-based company widely known for its production of stun-gun devices — has outfitted several large police departments with body cameras recently, including the Los Angeles Police Department, the New York City Police Department and departments in Texas, North Carolina and New Mexico.
Twenty cameras each will be distributed to officers in the Tampa Police Department’s three districts after they undergo a training period, Davis said. In addition to providing the cameras, Taser International will maintain the storage of the digital videos. The written policies and procedures for use of the technology currently is in draft form and undergoing an approval process with the city and the police department.
Questions have been raised about potential legal snags related to body cameras, including privacy concerns and public records compliance. Police officials hope the pilot program will help the department address those issues, Davis said.
“Through starting small, we can learn and tweak and adjust the policy,” she said.
The department is joining other West-Central Florida law enforcement agencies that have begun using body cameras. The Pasco County Sheriff’s Office and the Sarasota Police Department have announced that they will soon be using the technology; the Temple Terrace Police Department has been using them for a couple of years.
Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco, whose deputies will be wearing Taser Axon body cameras by February, has said he wanted to use the technology not only as an investigative tool but as a means of protecting law enforcement from false claims.
A 2012 study conducted by the University of Cambridge’s Institute of Criminology found that the number of citizen complaints and the number of use-of-force incidents dropped significantly when officers with the Rialto, California, police department began wearing body cameras.
Pastor Tom Scott, a former Tampa city councilman who has been outspoken about the lack of trust between black communities and law enforcement across the country recently, applauded the city’s decision to equip officers with body cameras.
“I fully support that,” Scott said. “I think that’s just another way of protecting both the community and the police officers.”
Ebehrman@Tampatrib.com
(813)259-7691
Twitter: @LizBehrmanTBO

Friday, January 02, 2015

As police get body cameras, what happens to all that video?

January 2, 2015

Here & Now

Getty/Andrew Burton
Officer Joshua Jones demonstrates how to use and operate a body camera during a press conference on December 3, 2014 in New York City.
One of the ideas catching hold after the non-indictments of police officers in the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown is equipping police with body cameras. Advocates of the idea say they increase transparency, and improve trust between communities and the police.
The Los Angeles Police Department recently bought 860 body cameras, and over the course of this year, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti says he wants all of the department’s roughly 7,000 front line officers wearing cameras.
The L.A.P.D bought its cameras from TASER, one of the leading companies in the law enforcement body camera industry. Along with the cameras, TASER also sells subscriptions to a site called evidence.com that police departments can use to store and manage all the video officers record while out on a shift.
Here & Now’s Lisa Mullins spoke with Steve Tuttle, one of the founding members of TASER, and the company’s vice president of strategic communications about who the cameras benefit, how the video is stored and managed, and concerns over privacy.
“The privacy concerns are certainly there and that’s up to the individual agencies and state laws that deal with that,” he said. “So we want to give them the features that can make this shareable in the manner that’s necessary for the public, but at the same time manage those expectations for privacy.”
Ultimately, Tuttle says the equipment is beneficial to both police and the public.
“If we were to empower the police with what we call the legal body armor of these on-officer cameras, I think we would give more accountability to the public and provide a lot more transparency of a use-of-force situation in which there’s a he-said-she-said,” Tuttle said.
On how TASER’s cameras work
“The camera that you put on your body, once you go on patrol is always recording in a video mode. Now what that does is it saves all the most recent video of the previous 30 seconds … And once it’s doing that, what the officer is then waiting for is an event to occur.”
“If you’ve got a radio callout, you’re going to double-click that button and it will grab the previous 30 seconds of video only and then it begins to add the audio portion. And that officer then goes on to the scene of the crime, maybe interviews a suspect, maybe arrests somebody. Keeps that camera rolling until that person is in jail. And then they press and hold that button for five seconds. You now have an event of that recording. If it were played back, you would hear 30 seconds of silence prior to when that officer pressed that button and you would then capture all that audio visual currents that occurred from pressing the button forward.”
On statistical evidence for body-camera effectiveness
“The evidence shows that it actually keeps the officer safer and the suspect safer. There was a watershed moment for us; it was called the Cambridge University Rialto Police Department Study. Rialto is a suburb of Los Angeles and they looked at the TASER AXON Camera Flex system for one year in a blind study. They found that the complaints were reduced by 88% — that’s a game-changer in and of itself, because you’ve now got a witness to certain situations where there’s been previously no witness. The bigger game changer was the 59% drop in use of force. That clearly is changing behavior on both sides of the badge.”

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Tampa Police Select Vendor for Purchase of Body Camera's... Dec. 31, 2014.. By Dan Sullivan, Times Writer

Tampa police select vendor for purchase of body cameras

TAMPA — The cameras weigh less than a typical police officer's badge. At the touch of a button, they can record for 12 hours straight. Soon, 60 officers will wear them on patrol in Tampa.
The Tampa Police Department has agreed to a five-year contract with Taser International for the purchase of 60 body-worn cameras. After reviewing bids from five companies, the department selected a proposal from Taser for an initial sum of about $83,000. The cost also includes the purchase of a digital evidence storage system to maintain video recordings.
Over five years, the city will pay $287,220 for the purchase and maintenance of the cameras and the video storage system. The purchase is scheduled to be reviewed by the City Council on Jan. 8. Police plan to begin outfitting officers with the cameras in February.
"I'm pretty sure they would like to get this up and running as soon as possible," said Gregory Spearman, the city's purchasing director.
Four other companies submitted bids for the contract in December. They were Mediasolv Solutions Corp., Digital Ally Inc., L3 Communications and Reveal Media.
Each proposal detailed costs for the purchase of both the initial 60 cameras and the projected amount to outfit all 750 officers who patrol the city. Taser's proposal was the most expensive.
Best known as the developer of the electroshock gun commonly used by law enforcement, Taser International has in recent years emerged as a leader in the market for body cameras.
The Arizona-based company touts the sale of more than 18,000 cameras to law enforcement agencies nationwide. Their customers have included police departments in Fort Worth, Texas; Albuquerque, N.M.; New Orleans; and Las Vegas.
They also provided cameras to the Rialto Police Department in California. A yearlong study in 2012 showed formal complaints against that department's officers fell 88 percent after the cameras were introduced. The department also saw a more than 50 percent reduction in use of force by officers, the study found.
In Tampa, officers will wear Taser's Axon Flex cameras, a tiny, durable model easily mounted to any part of an officer's uniform.
Officers will be unable to edit or delete videos, which will be marked with an unalterable time stamp. Once purchased, 20 cameras each will be distributed to Tampa's three police districts. Taser representatives will train officers on how to use them.
Questions remain about how the department will regulate camera use. It is unclear when officers will be required to turn them on, how long video recordings will be retained and whether recordings might be restricted on private property.
The department is drafting a standard operating procedure governing the use of the cameras, said spokeswoman Andrea Davis. The goal is to eventually have all of the city's 750 patrol officers wearing them.
"We already have many officers who are requesting the cameras," Davis said. "This is a pilot program. We're seeing how these 60 work and we'll make a plan after that."
Contact Dan Sullivan at dsullivan@tampabay.com or (813) 226-3386. Follow @TimesDan.
Tampa police select vendor for purchase of body cameras 12/31/14 [Last modified: Wednesday, December 31, 2014 7:59pm]