Thursday, May 15, 2025
Beyond the Crime Scene
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
Beyond the Crime Scene
No Result
View All Result
Home News

What Bodycams Tell Us About the Challenges of Policing the Police

by
December 16, 2023
in News
0
A White male police officer holds a police vest, pointing out its body camera.
189
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


This is The Marshall Project’s Closing Argument newsletter, a weekly deep dive into a key criminal justice issue. Want this delivered to your inbox? Subscribe to future newsletters here.

Over the past decade, the adoption of body-worn cameras has been one of the most popular and durable police reforms in the U.S.

The technology has enjoyed broad support from both the general public and from police. After a slew of high-profile shootings seared public consciousness through the lens of bystander video, the wisdom of recording all police interactions with the public has been hard to argue against.

A recent investigation by ProPublica and The New York Times, however, found that the promise of body cameras has been undermined by policies around the release of footage. “Departments across the country have routinely delayed releasing footage, released only partial or redacted video or refused to release it at all,” write Eric Umansky and Umar Farooq. “They have frequently failed to discipline or fire officers when body cameras document abuse and have kept footage from the agencies charged with investigating police misconduct.”

Their review of 79 police killings captured by body camera footage in June 2022 found that footage has only been made public in 42% of cases.

Another limitation of body camera footage is that it relies on subjective interpretation. When TheGrio news network recently sent footage of the same police use-of-force incidents to 10 experts, interpretations of what they saw and heard varied dramatically, even on basic matters including whether or not the subject complied with officer demands.

Perhaps hard-to-get footage is better than none at all, though. A recent NBC News investigation found that unlike local law enforcement, federal agents don’t generally wear cameras, essentially turning shootings by the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, the Drug Enforcement Agency, and the U.S. Marshals into a black box.

Once body camera footage is released, it can be instrumental in countering false police accounts that likely would have been accepted as true. Take the case of Ronald Greene, who was killed by state police outside of Monroe, Louisiana, in 2019. Officers reported he had died in a car crash. But body camera footage revealed that they’d beaten, tased, and mocked Greene and then left him handcuffed and shackled face down while waiting for an ambulance. Three of the officers involved are facing criminal charges, and the agency is under federal investigation.

Victims of police violence and their families often seek the release of body camera footage, in the hope that public outrage will lead to accountability that is otherwise elusive. This week, the mother of an 11-year-old Black boy shot by police in Mississippi made exactly that demand after a grand jury declined to press charges. “I feel disgusted, outraged and emotionally damaged,” she said at a Wednesday press conference, after viewing the footage in private.

Police oversight agencies, such as civilian complaint review boards, benefit from the footage — when they can get a hold of it. As we covered in a prior edition of Closing Argument, these kinds of organizations are popular (many of the nation’s large cities have one), but they have dramatically different amounts of power from place to place. It’s common for their power to expand or contract as political dynamics shift in a given city or state, especially through protracted battles with police unions.

The Chicago Civilian Office of Police Accountability is one of the few in the country with direct access to body camera footage, a power it received after outrage over the shooting death of Laquan McDonald in 2014. But that hasn’t stopped the city’s police union from trying to bargain away other avenues of public oversight. In current contract negotiations, the union is seeking a provision that would allow officers accused of misconduct to remove their cases from the docket of the public Chicago Police Board, “and instead have them decided privately by an outside third party,” the Chicago Tribune reports.

In New York the civilian review board must navigate a maze of bureaucracy to obtain body camera footage, and now faces a new stumbling block. The board announced this week that it was suspending several categories of investigation into police misconduct due to budget cuts demanded by Mayor Eric Adams, a former police officer.

In Florida, civilian review boards face a threat to their very existence. A state representative recently filed a bill that would make it illegal for cities to create any kind of agency for receiving, processing, or investigating “complaints of misconduct by law enforcement and corrections officers.” The bill sponsor cited the stress that investigations can put on officers. It’s a move reminiscent of other efforts by state officials in Florida to restrict how their local counterparts handle the justice system.

In New Jersey, by contrast, lawmakers advanced a bill this week that would give civilian complaint review boards the power to subpoena witnesses — an authority that these boards and their supporters often covet. A proposed amendment would only apply the power to four of the state’s largest departments as a pilot program for five years, making the bill bittersweet for advocates of more oversight. “Examples of police misconduct and brutality exist in literally every corner of New Jersey,” said Joe Johnson of the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey, according to the New Jersey Monitor. “So civilian oversight is important everywhere.”



Source link

Related articles

Disturbing video shows sicko set homeless woman on fire

Disturbing video shows sicko set homeless woman on fire

May 15, 2025
Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

May 15, 2025
Share76Tweet47
Previous Post

NYC anti-Jewish property crimes up 85% since Israel-Hamas war began

Next Post

Tell the City Council to drop its plan to bury NYPD cops in useless paperwork

Related Posts

Disturbing video shows sicko set homeless woman on fire

Disturbing video shows sicko set homeless woman on fire

by
May 15, 2025
0

Chilling video shows a sick firebug calmly setting a homeless woman on fire — leaving her so severely burned she...

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

by
May 15, 2025
0

An Upstate New York teenager has been charged with murdering his 14-year-old girlfriend because she told him she was pregnant...

Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

by
May 15, 2025
0

Crime rates aboard cruise ships leaving the US have reached a two-year high, and one expert says this creates a...

Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

by
May 15, 2025
0

By Mark Puente, The Marshall Project, and Scott Noll, News 5 Cleveland Additional reporting contributed by Brittany Hailer Nearly five...

Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he's arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he’s arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

by
May 15, 2025
0

Karma took the wheel. The serial Tesla road rage driver who landed back behind bars for allegedly assaulting a teen...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

May 29, 2023
Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

September 22, 2024
Mackenzie Shirilla

Father of Mackenzie Shirilla’s boyfriend doesn’t support life sentence

August 20, 2023
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

May 9, 2023
The Murder of Latanisha Carmichael – TRUE CRIME REPORT

The Murder of Latanisha Carmichael – TRUE CRIME REPORT

June 7, 2023
The Unsolved Murder of Karina Holmer – TRUE CRIME REPORT

The Unsolved Murder of Karina Holmer – TRUE CRIME REPORT

September 3, 2023
The tragic story of solo traveler Emma Kelty

The tragic story of solo traveler Emma Kelty

May 15, 2023
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

0
Dwane Roy Dreher: photo of his 2nd wife, Lois Genzler Dreher at 16 years old

The 1955 disappearance of U.S. Navy veteran Dwane Roy Dreher

0
Alta Braun: professional photo taken when she was about 4 years old.

The 1917 unsolved murder of Alta Marie Braun

0
Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

0
Kristi Nikle: photo of suspect Floyd Tapson

The 1996 disappearance of Kristi Nikle

0
Frank and Tessie Pozar: photo of their son, Frank Pozar, Jr.

Motel Mystery: What happened to Frank and Tessie Pozar?

0
Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

0
Disturbing video shows sicko set homeless woman on fire

Disturbing video shows sicko set homeless woman on fire

May 15, 2025
Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

Upstate NY teen allegedly killed 14-year-old Samantha Humphrey after she said she was pregnant

May 15, 2025
Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

Cruise ship crime reaches 2-year high, casting ‘dark cloud’ for travelers: expert

May 15, 2025
Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

Why Miscarriages and Stillbirths Go Unreported Inside Ohio Jails

May 15, 2025
Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he's arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

Serial Tesla road-rager Nathaniel Radimak beaten to a bloody pulp in prison after he’s arrested for attacking mom, teen learning how to park

May 15, 2025
The victim was walking home around 9 a.m. Friday when the unidentified hooded gunman approached her from behind on a University Heights street and brazenly pointed the weapon without saying a word, authorities said. 

NYC woman, 32, lucky to be alive after stranger tries to shoot her from behind, missing her by ‘a centimeter’: cops

May 15, 2025
Maniac with 20 prior arrests busted in random attack on L.A. grandma, 70, in NYC subway station: sources

Maniac with 20 prior arrests busted in random attack on L.A. grandma, 70, in NYC subway station: sources

May 15, 2025
Beyond the Crime Scene with Bee Astronaut

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Podcast
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos

Legal Pages

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • DMCA

© 2023 All right reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast

© 2023 All right reserved.