ACLU
fights U.S. funding for Los Angeles police body cameras
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[September 04, 2015]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A civil rights
group asked the U.S. government on Thursday to deny Los Angeles police
the funding they sought for body cameras for patrol officers, objecting
to a policy that would allow the police chief to withhold video footage
from the public.
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The nearly 9,900-member Los Angeles Police Department is the
nation's third-largest metropolitan police force and the biggest to
commit to equipping all its patrol officers, numbering about 7,000,
with so-called bodycams.
City officials say the cameras will build public trust after a
series of racially charged police shootings and other encounters
sparked protests and unrest in the United States.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California agrees
that bodycams are a potentially useful tool, but objects to a policy
that would allow the city's police chief to withhold a video from
the public unless a court orders it released.
ACLU officials also oppose an LAPD policy that would allow an
officer who has used force against a person to review bodycam
footage before talking to investigators.
"Appropriate policies are vitally important for ensuring that
body-worn camera programs serve their intended goals of improving
transparency, accountability and public trust in law enforcement,
and do not do more harm than good," the chapter's director of police
practices, Peter Bibring, wrote in a letter to the U.S. Justice
Department.
Bibring also raised questions about how bodycams could collect
footage of demonstrators and asked the department's Bureau of
Justice Assistance to withhold money sought by the city's police to
pay for 700 cameras.
Steve Soboroff, president of the Los Angeles police commission, said
he was surprised by the letter, which came three days after the LAPD
began handing out bodycams to officers at a patrol division.
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Providing all remaining patrol officers with bodycams will cost
about $10 million, including storage of the video, with the federal
government contributing $1 million, Soboroff said.
The bodycams will reduce police use of force and complaints against
officers and ultimately save lives, Soboroff said. The ACLU was
involved in discussions over the bodycams, and their letter crosses
a line, he said.
"I would have trouble sleeping at night if I was keeping L.A. from
getting cameras," Soboroff said.
Soboroff said the policies would be reviewed later and could be
revised.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Doina
Chiacu)
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