Brutal Reality : When police wear body cameras, citizens are much safer.

tmonster

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Brutal Reality



When police wear body cameras, citizens are much safer.
By David Feige


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A patrol officer in West Valley City, Utah, starts a body camera recording by pressing a button on his chest before he takes a theft report from a construction worker with his newly issued body camera, attached to the side of a pair of glasses, on March 2, 2015.
Photo by George Frey/Getty Images

The release this week of a shocking video depicting police officer Michael Slager shooting Walter Scott in the back, and then appearing to toss a Taser near his prone, handcuffed body, reignited a national discussion about police accountability and the reliability of officer narratives in police-involved shootings.

In his initial radio call, Slager followed an all-too-familiar script. It is a script carefully designed to mirror the requirements of a self-defense exoneration, and its basic elements are well-known to police across the country: He struggled/reached for my gun/Taser/weapon. I feared for my safety. I thought my life was in danger.

The video from North Charleston, South Carolina, clearly shows an event inconsistent with Slager’s claims, and he was quickly arrested and charged with murder. But there is a lesson in previous cases of police brutality, such as the failure to prosecute the police who were recorded asphyxiating Eric Garner and the initial acquittal of the officers in the Rodney King beating: Even in the face of seemingly incontrovertible video evidence, this blame-the-perpetrator defense regularly works for police officers.

The difficulty in indicting and convicting police officers illuminates an uncomfortable truth of the criminal justice system: There is an enormous divide in the standards of justice we apply to cops as opposed to all other citizens. To bridge that divide, and help bring more accountability to the system, Police Chief Eddie Driggers of North Charleston suggested the very solution a federal judge has demanded of the New York Police Department, and that President Obama has committed to spending a quarter-billion dollars on: body cameras.

The theory behind the use of body cameras is that video evidence will provide us with some objective truth about what happens in violent encounters between civilians and police. But that is the wrong way to look at it. As the tapes of King’s beating and Garner’s death make clear, video evidence can be very powerful but still not overcome the vast structural advantages enjoyed by the police in the legal system. The real value in body cameras is not what they show, but rather what they don’t. That’s because the presence of cameras induces an absence of violence.

People aren’t complaining about police abuse at random; citizens aren’t just making these grievances up.

The central study on the effectiveness of body cameras comes from an experiment in Rialto, California. The results were dramatic: After the wholesale adoption of body cameras, complaints against officers dropped 88 percent and use-of-force reports fell by 60 percent. In a randomly assigned pilot project in Mesa, Arizona, 75 percent fewer use-of-force complaints were filed against officers who wore the cameras than against those who did not.

The most important part of the research was the strong correlation between the decline in the use of force and the decline in complaints about the use of force. This correlation makes it clear that people aren’t complaining about police abuse at random; citizens aren’t just making these grievances up. Thus for the first time, these numbers can give us a sense of just how often citizen complaints are legitimate, and they finally allow us to measure the effectiveness of our mechanisms for police oversight and accountability.

The Mesa and Rialto studies suggest that when the police don’t engage in abuse, citizens don’t in fact report it. That means it’s reasonable to conclude that a substantial majority of the public’s complaints about police brutality are legitimate, or at a very minimum grounded in the kind of behavior that the police simply wouldn’t engage in with body cameras present.

And if we can now say with some certainty that the bulk of these citizen complaints are grounded in behavior the police would, if watched, not engage in, then we finally have some yardstick by which to measure the structural injustices of the system, or at least how often the legitimate complaints of citizens are dismissed in favor of the self-justification of the police.

In 2013 the Civilian Complaint Review Board in New York City received more than 5,000 complaints of excessive use of force, totaling 11,334 allegations. (Sometimes multiple officers were involved). Of those allegations, 189 were substantiated in a process that took an average of 450 days to complete. Worse, the substantiation of a complaint of excessive use of force did not by any means ensure that a police officer would actually be punished. On the contrary, slightly more than half of the police officers against whom cases were substantiated were administratively charged, and a verbal reprimand was the most common punishment. While the data from the body camera studies suggests that a significant majority of police abuse complaints have merit, the current system makes the chance that an officer will experience any real repercussions from using excessive force against a civilian less than one half of 1 percent.

So is it any wonder that Officer Slager, who had two prior complaints against him, one alleging excessive force for unjustified Tasing, was reportedly exonerated in the violent incident and still on the force when he killed Walter Scott? Given the utter lack of accountability, it is no wonder that police violence is endemic. But if implemented properly, body cameras can change that, not so much through recording bad behavior, but just by being present and thus preventing it.

Unfortunately, there are major impediments to deploying body cameras. In the wake of Garner’s death, Patrick Lynch, the head of New York City’s Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, criticized the the man who videotaped the incident, claiming he was “demonizing the good work of police officers.” So it is no surprise that Lynch has also insisted that “there is simply no need to equip patrol officers with body cams.” And in Miami, the police union claims that the devices could place “the lives of the public and the officers in danger” and “distract officers from their duties, and hamper their ability to act and react in dangerous situations.” Across the country, police unions have been the biggest obstacle to the deployment of body cameras.

Amicus: Marriage Arrives
150217_AMI_supremecourtbldg.jpg.CROP.promo-small2.jpg

The Supreme Court is finally taking up same-sex marriage. How did we get here and what should we expect next?

It’s pretty easy to understand why the police unions don’t want their members watched: Between objective evidence of encounters that do happen, and the huge decline in brutality that is deterred by the very presence of cameras, all of a sudden, the system might just become a lot more fair. And when you’re the party in power, and the system is already stacked wildly in your favor, fairness may be the last thing you want.

Nonetheless, as video after amateur video begins to contradict law enforcement’s well-established get-out-out-jail-free mantra, not only will citizens become more skeptical of officers’ stories, but the demand for real accountability will make the widespread deployment of body cameras all but inevitable. The irony of course, is that the most salutary effects of that deployment will never be caught on tape.

Source : http://www.slate.com/articles/news_...it_less_violence_and_complaints_are_real.html
 
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Liu Kang

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For those interested in reading the study in question :
New Publication Available: The Effect of Body-Worn Cameras on Police Use-of-Force


Police Foundation Executive Fellow, Chief Tony Farrar, recently completed an extensive yearlong study to evaluate the effect of body-worn video cameras on police use-of-force. This randomized controlled trail represents the first experimental evaluation of body-worn video cameras used in police patrol practices. Cameras were deployed to all patrol officers in the Rialto (CA) Police Department. Every police patrol shift during the 12-month period was assigned to experimental or control conditions.

Wearing cameras was associated with dramatic reductions in use-of-force and complaints against officers. The authors conclude:

"The findings suggest more than a 50% reduction in the total number of incidents of use-of-force compared to control-conditions, and nearly ten times more citizens’ complaints in the 12-months prior to the experiment."

We applaud Chief Farrar for his commitment to conducting rigorous scientific research on a technology initiative that has broad implications for the field of policing. The full report, coauthored with Dr. Barak Ariel, Cambridge University, can be found at the following link.

See the New York Times report on the study.

Author information:

Barak Ariel, PhD, Jerry Lee Fellow in Experimental Criminology and Teaching Associate in the Police Executive Programme, Cambridge University

Chief Tony Farrar, Executive Fellow, Police Foundation & Chief of Police, Rialto Police Department
http://www.policefoundation.org/content/body-worn-cameras-police-use-force



STUDY
Self-awareness to being watched and socially-desirable behavior: A field experiment on the effect of body-worn cameras on police use-of-force
[...]
We have tested whether police body-worn cameras would lead to socially-desirable behavior of the officers who wear them. Individualized HD cameras were “installed” on the officers’ uniforms, and systematically-recorded every police-public interaction. We randomly-assigned a year’s worth of police shifts into experimental and control shifts within a large randomized-controlled-field-experiment conducted with the Rialto-Police-Department (California).

We investigated the extent to which cameras effect human behavior and, specifically, reduce the use of police force. Broadly, we have put to test the implication of self-awareness to being observed on compliance and deterrence theory in real-life settings, and explored the results in the wider context of theory and practice.



NYT ARTICLE :
Wearing a Badge, and a Video Camera
By RANDALL STROSSAPRIL 6, 2013

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Some police departments are turning to wearable cameras, allowing their officers to record interactions with citizens. At the Taser International headquarters in Scottsdale, Ariz., Joseph LeDuc, a police officer, checked a video made with such a camera. CreditJoshua Lott for The New York Times

William A. Farrar, the police chief in Rialto, Calif., has been investigating whether officers’ use of video cameras can bring measurable benefits to relations between the police and civilians. Officers in Rialto, which has a population of about 100,000, already carry Taser weapons equipped with small video cameras that activate when the weapon is armed, and the officers have long worn digital audio recorders.


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Officer LeDuc wore one of the cameras on his sunglasses. CreditJoshua Lott for The New York Times
But when Mr. Farrar told his uniformed patrol officers of his plans to introduce the new, wearable video cameras, “it wasn’t the easiest sell,” he said, especially to some older officers who initially were “questioning why ‘big brother’ should see everything they do.”

He said he reminded them that civilians could use their cellphones to record interactions, “so instead of relying on somebody else’s partial picture of what occurred, why not have your own?” he asked. “In this way, you have the real one.”

Last year, Mr. Farrar used the new wearable video cameras to conduct a continuing experiment in his department, in collaboration with Barak Ariel, a visiting fellow at the Institute of Criminology at the University of Cambridge and an assistant professor at Hebrew University.

Half of Rialto’s uniformed patrol officers on each week’s schedule have been randomly assigned the cameras, also made by Taser International. Whenever officers wear the cameras, they are expected to activate them when they leave the patrol car to speak with a civilian.

A convenient feature of the camera is its “pre-event video buffer,” which continuously records and holds the most recent 30 seconds of video when the camera is off. In this way, the initial activity that prompts the officer to turn on the camera is more likely to be captured automatically, too.

THE Rialto study began in February 2012 and will run until this July. The results from the first 12 months are striking. Even with only half of the 54 uniformed patrol officers wearing cameras at any given time, the department over all had an 88 percent decline in the number of complaints filed against officers, compared with the 12 months before the study, to 3 from 24.

Rialto’s police officers also used force nearly 60 percent less often — in 25 instances, compared with 61. When force was used, it was twice as likely to have been applied by the officers who weren’t wearing cameras during that shift, the study found. And, lest skeptics think that the officers with cameras are selective about which encounters they record, Mr. Farrar noted that those officers who apply force while wearing a camera have always captured the incident on video.

As small as the cameras are, they seem to be noticeable to civilians, he said. “When you look at an officer,” he said, “it kind of sticks out.” Citizens have sometimes asked officers, “Hey, are you wearing a camera?” and the officers say they are, he reported.

But what about the privacy implications? Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union, says: “We don’t like the networks of police-run video cameras that are being set up in an increasing number of cities. We don’t think the government should be watching over the population en masse.” But requiring police officers to wear video cameras is different, he says: “When it comes to the citizenry watching the government, we like that.”

Mr. Stanley says that all parties stand to benefit — the public is protected from police misconduct, and officers are protected from bogus complaints. “There are many police officers who’ve had a cloud fall over them because of an unfounded accusation of abuse,” he said. “Now police officers won’t have to worry so much about that kind of thing.”

Mr. Farrar says officers have told him of cases when citizens arrived at a Rialto police station to file a complaint and the supervisor was able to retrieve and play on the spot the video of what had transpired. “The individuals left the station with basically no other things to say and have never come back,” he said.

The A.C.L.U. does have a few concerns about possible misuse of the recordings. Mr. Stanley says civilians shouldn’t have to worry that a video will be leaked and show up on CNN. Nor would he approve of the police storing years of videos and then using them for other purposes, like trolling for crimes with which to charge civilians. He suggests policies specifying that the videos be deleted after a certain short period.

A spokesman for Taser International said it had received orders from various police departments, including those in Pittsburgh, Salt Lake City and Hartford, as well as Fort Worth, Tex.; Chesapeake, Va.; and Modesto, Calif. In the San Francisco Bay Area, the police department of BART, the transit system, has bought 210 cameras and is training its officers in their use, part of changes undertaken after a BART police officer’s fatal shooting of an unarmed man in 2009.

Before the cameras, “there were so many situations where it was ‘he said, she said,’ and juries tend to believe police officers over accused criminals,” Mr. Stanley says. “The technology really has the potential to level the playing field in any kind of controversy or allegation of abuse.”

Mr. Farrar recently completed a master’s degree in applied criminology and police management at the University of Cambridge. (It required only six weeks a year of residency in England.) And he wrote about the video-camera experiment in his thesis.

He says his goal is to equip all uniformed officers in his department with the video cameras. “Video is very transparent,” he said. “It’s the whole enchilada.”

Randall Stross is an author based in Silicon Valley and a professor of business at San Jose State University. E-mail: stross@nytimes.com.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/07/business/wearable-video-cameras-for-police-officers.html
 

kp404

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Story is not true. Police can shut the cameras off and manipulate them. This is a soggy, non-sticky Band-Aid that will not decrease the violence against African Americans. You want to stop police brutality? Stop empowering the police to act in any way they want in a country where they are supposed to be servants of the people instead of protectors of private property from the underclasses. Restructure the foundation and you can stop cracks from happening. The American police system has a crack so large that it cannot be fixed with cameras, videos, or anything without changing the entire system so it doesn't internalize racist and exploitative polices and practices against the majority of people. If you aren't talking these drastic measures, you're wasting time, and more peoples' lives.

Article is pure fiction and the numbers will show it.
 

Liu Kang

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Story is not true. Police can shut the cameras off and manipulate them. This is a soggy, non-sticky Band-Aid that will not decrease the violence against African Americans. You want to stop police brutality? Stop empowering the police to act in any way they want in a country where they are supposed to be servants of the people instead of protectors of private property from the underclasses. Restructure the foundation and you can stop cracks from happening. The American police system has a crack so large that it cannot be fixed with cameras, videos, or anything without changing the entire system so it doesn't internalize racist and exploitative polices and practices against the majority of people. If you aren't talking these drastic measures, you're wasting time, and more peoples' lives.

Article is pure fiction and the numbers will show it.
What are you talking about ?
The study from a year long experiment shows a difference in behavior in the police force which knows their interactions with civilians are recorded but also and also in the citizens that are aware that the police is capturing the interaction. Thus the Rialto experiment is interesting for three reasons :
- the police force is equipped with tasers which once armed records automatically what is happening.
- the police was required to activate the recording everytime they left the police car.
- every incident that involved the use of force during that period was actually recorded.

Of course the underlying problem (lack of/deficient formation, trigger happy cops etc.) still is here but this is an interesting tool that could help fixing/healing/resetting the US police. It is not possible to erase decades long behaviors (above all when they are wrong), it's a step by step process and if this can contribute, it could be given a chance IMO.
 
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Do people really think cops are going to be caught slipping off their own camera?:wtf:

Like the cop is going to head back to the station on some "here is video evidence of me using excessive force and it resulting in death, my bad:francis:"
 

kp404

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What are you talking about ?
The study from a year long experiment shows a difference in behavior in the police force which knows their interactions with civilians are recorded but also and also in the citizens that are aware that the police is capturing the interaction. Thus the Rialto experiment is interesting for three reasons :
- the police force is equipped with tasers which once armed records automatically what is happening.
- the police was required to activate the recording everytime they left the police car.
- every incident that involved the use of force during that period was actually recorded.

Of course the underlying problem (lack of formation, trigger happy cops etc.) still is here but this is an interesting tool that could help fixing/healing/resetting the US police. It is not possible to erase decades long behaviors (above all when they are wrong), it's a step by step process and if this can contribute, it could be given a chance IMO.

Again, you're talking about a sloppy Band-Aid; How do body cameras change how police, as a whole, are taught to feel, think, and act against black and brown people? Its not a few cops killing black and brown people; its the foundation of police enacting repressive measures against the whole black and brown population of this country for the purposes of sustaining a neoliberal global capital state. Thus, the technology can be manipulated to fit the needs of systemic racism.

My point in one sentence: body cameras or any type of technology cannot solve SYSTEMIC, INSTITUTIONALIZED, CONSTITUTIVE RACIST IDEOLOGY, POLICES AND PRACTICES. The problem is in the roots, not in the leaves. Put body cameras on cops, two things will happen: we will have more videos of people being executed or we will have less videos because the cameras will be cut off, but people will still be executed by police.

What you're not understanding is that the increase in police murders against blacks is the police responding to our calls for democracy and justice. our rallies, protests, and demands for them to be servants to us is resulting in police feeling they need to empower themselves, thus they kill more of us. This is a historical trend and happens every time an economic lull happens or democratic social movements become large. Neoliberalism can only be enforced through increased police repression.

Like I said, body cameras won't stop police murders. People are afraid to address the problem in the roots, so they stick with the leaves, which are easier to reach. Sad because more lives are stake now.
 

FaTaL

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Do people really think cops are going to be caught slipping off their own camera?:wtf:

Like the cop is going to head back to the station on some "here is video evidence of me using excessive force and it resulting in death, my bad:francis:"
hopefully the vids are automatically uploaded to police station with limited accessibility
 

Liu Kang

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hopefully the vids are automatically uploaded to police station with limited accessibility
The system is perfectible indeed but I think the automated process could be possible from a strictly technological POV.
- automatic cloud upload once the recording is done (problem will then be to have access to this database or make it public)
- automatic recording when the camera is further then a set distance from the police car (for example (it's naive but still) a simple bluetooth connexion from the car to the cam and when the two are too far from each other, the bluetooth connexion is off and the recording starts)
- automatic recording when a taser is armed (already done)
- automatic recording when the gun is cocked ?
- firing a police officer if he "forgets" to record a shootout
etc.

The solution deserves at least a wider and longer try IMO above all when the article states that there is a 30s buffer which allows to record the 30s prior the manual starting of the camera. Which is also an interesting featureq.

that's some good mod action right there
Not the first time I do this but it's the first time it's noticed. This warms my heart... :mjcry:
 

tmonster

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Again, you're talking about a sloppy Band-Aid; How do body cameras change how police, as a whole, are taught to feel, think, and act against black and brown people?
:lupe:you do know...using...using body cameras does not stop us from doing other stuff too...?
 

Ed MOTHEREFFING G

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Story is not true. Police can shut the cameras off and manipulate them. This is a soggy, non-sticky Band-Aid that will not decrease the violence against African Americans. You want to stop police brutality? Stop empowering the police to act in any way they want in a country where they are supposed to be servants of the people instead of protectors of private property from the underclasses. Restructure the foundation and you can stop cracks from happening. The American police system has a crack so large that it cannot be fixed with cameras, videos, or anything without changing the entire system so it doesn't internalize racist and exploitative polices and practices against the majority of people. If you aren't talking these drastic measures, you're wasting time, and more peoples' lives.

Article is pure fiction and the numbers will show it.
furthermore, the use of cameras will eventually negate reasonable doubt or due process when juries take what they are presented as visual of what happened when in reality they're getting post manipulation of a video that shows one angle and one direction of a situation. It can easily taint the story of what actually happened.


Police forces are trained as local millitaries rather than serving and protecting the populous. Whats worse is they are being trained to be scared for their lives rather than to be prepared for situations.

This is a change that happened over the last 25 years. Cops didn't used to be like this; I know because there are many in my family.
 

kp404

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furthermore, the use of cameras will eventually negate reasonable doubt or due process when juries take what they are presented as visual of what happened when in reality they're getting post manipulation of a video that shows one angle and one direction of a situation. It can easily taint the story of what actually happened.


Police forces are trained as local millitaries rather than serving and protecting the populous. Whats worse is they are being trained to be scared for their lives rather than to be prepared for situations.

This is a change that happened over the last 25 years. Cops didn't used to be like this; I know because there are many in my family.
Exactly. Great post.
 
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