Some police departments shelve body cameras, blame data costs

  发布时间:2024-09-23 01:19:18   作者:玩站小弟   我要评论
INDIANAPOLIS — Police departments in at least two states that outfitted their officers with bo 。

INDIANAPOLIS — Police departments in at least two states that outfitted their officers with body cameras have now shelved them, blaming new laws requiring videos to be stored longer, which they say would significantly increase the cost.

About a third of the nation's 18,000 police agencies are either testing body cameras or have embraced them to record their officers' interactions with the public. But departments in Indiana and Connecticut suspended their programs this year after their states imposed considerably longer video-storage rules.

SEE ALSO:Arrest warrant issued for journalist Amy Goodman after pipeline protest coverage

Clarksville, a southern Indiana town just north of Louisville, Kentucky, began using body cameras in 2012 for its 50 full-time officers and 25 reservists. That program ended in late June when Chief Mark Palmer pulled the cameras in response to Indiana's new law requiring agencies using the cameras to store the videos for at least 190 days.

Palmer said his department's video storage and camera maintenance costs had been between $5,000 and $10,000 a year under its 30-day video storage policy. But the new law that took effect July 1 would have raised those costs to $50,000 to $100,000 for the first year, he said, by requiring videos to be stored more than six times longer.

Mashable Games

Palmer said the department would have had to buy new servers and may have had to buy new cameras and software and to train someone to use it, and that although the cost would have been lower in subsequent years, it still would have been high.

"This has really hit us hard. That's not the kind of thing we budgeted for when we set this year's budget in place," Palmer said of his department in the Ohio River community of about 20,000 residents.

Mashable ImageLos Angeles Police Department Officer Jim Stover demonstrates the use of a body camera during a training session at Mission Station on August 31, 2015 in Los Angeles, California.Credit: LA Times via Getty Images

The adjacent city of Jeffersonville also shelved its 70 officers' cameras for the same reasons, and other Indiana police agencies have delayed committing to the cameras while they monitor the new law's impact.

Palmer said he's working with Jeffersonville police on ways they might be able to resume their programs by holding down costs by sharing equipment with other agencies.Civil rights activists have long called for police officers to wear body cameras, and even more so since the 2014 fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, by a white officer in Ferguson, Missouri.

Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst for the national American Civil Liberties Union's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, acknowledged that costs of operating body camera programs can be daunting. But he said he's concerned that some departments might use the costs "as a cover" to avoid the added layer of oversight the cameras bring.

Mashable Top StoriesStay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletterBy signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

"There could be good reasons for a community not to adopt body cameras, but a police department's desire to escape accountability is not one of them," Stanley said.

Looming higher video storage costs were also the reason the Berlin, Connecticut, police department ended its body camera program this year after testing eight body cameras that had rotated among its 42 officers, said Chief Paul Fitzgerald. His department followed the Connecticut state librarian's suggestion to retain video for 60 days, and longer in instances involving ongoing investigations or citizen complaints.

But Fitzgerald shelved the cameras in January in response to new state standards approved late last year. Those standards, which a Connecticut law directed a state board to draft, require all body camera videos to be stored for at least 90 days — and for at least four years if they're deemed evidentiary.

"Everybody's trying to maintain budgets and that becomes very difficult," Fitzgerald said. "It's the long term costs, of unfunded mandates."

At least eight states -- Indiana, Oregon, Illinois, Nevada, California, New Hampshire, Nebraska and Georgia -- have laws spelling out how long police departments must preserve the footage the cameras capture, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Police departments typically have to buy new servers or pay for a cloud service to store the videos. And additional staffers often need to be hired to handle public records requests, manage videos that must be stored for long durations and redact videos to blur the faces of minors or otherwise protect privacy.

Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard, whose Michigan department covers Detroit's northern suburbs, said he won't equip his 900 officers with the cameras largely because his department's startup costs for the cameras and storing the resulting videos for just 30 days would amount to more than $1 million a year.

"For body cams it's a deal-breaker. I won't implement them," he said.

Medium-sized police departments, those with between about 50 and 250 officers, appear to be facing the biggest challenges with video storage because they often don't have enough space on servers or hard drives for their considerable data storage needs, said Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum.

Small police departments and large metropolitan departments seem to be having an easier time managing their body camera costs, he said. And in a decade, Wexler predicts, departments without the cameras affixed to officers' uniforms will be rare and competition among vendors will mean the videos will be cheaper to store.

"That's going to be a good thing for the field," he said.

  • Tag:

相关文章

  • Ruling bloc divided on foreign nannies' pay

    A hundred Filipina domestic helpers arrive at Incheon Airport on Aug. 6. (Pool photo via Yonhap)Sout
    2024-09-23
  • 车载流动医院:打通群众看病难“最后一公里”

    乡镇卫生院的医生主动下乡看病,这对村民来说并不是什么新鲜事。但乡镇卫生院的医生来到村里,不但可以看病,还可以现场开药和报账,这就有了很大的不同——这就是车载流动医院。2018年8月,宝兴县以陇东镇、蜂
    2024-09-23
  • 调节饮食生活习惯 远离糖尿病困扰

    说起糖尿病,不少市民觉得那是老年人才会得的病。事实上,近年来糖尿病有逐渐年轻化的趋势。据市疾控中心介绍,我国糖尿病总体患病率为11.2%,雅安市人群糖尿病患病率为9.7%,即每10个人中就有1人患有糖
    2024-09-23
  • 厅堂改造,只因您而变

    2018年,田惠宇行长提出打造“最佳零售体验银行”,这对于所有的招行一线员工来说都是重要转型的一年,秉承着“因您而变”的服务理念,以及“打造
    2024-09-23
  • Webb scientists haven't found a rocky world with air. But now they have a plan.

    Perhaps surprisingly, the majority of stars in the galaxy are not sunclones but smaller orbs of gas
    2024-09-23
  • 招行青岛云霄路支行开展防范打击非法集资教育活动

    近期,招行云霄路支行积极开展了防范打击非法集资教育活动。1. 支行通过室内LED显示屏循环滚动播放宣传语:(一)远离非法集资,拒绝高利诱惑(二)树立正确投资理念,警惕非法集资陷阱(三)提高风险防范意识
    2024-09-23

最新评论