Vancouver Sun

No evidence body cameras reduce police violence: study

Yet Calgary force sees them as a useful ‘tool’

- KELLY GERALDINE MALONE

A Calgary police officer loudly tells an Indigenous man to put his hands on the roof of his car and, within seconds, the situation escalates to yelling. Body-worn camera video from the officer’s chest then shows the man’s head pushed into his vehicle.

Herbert Daniels, 67, made a freedom of informatio­n request to get the video of his arrest, which he provided to Global News, saying it demonstrat­es excessive force.

Using the arrest of Daniels as an example, many politician­s have been calling for wider use of police body cameras in the wake of global protests calling to defund police, claiming the technology increases accountabi­lity.

There is, however, no consistent evidence that the cameras reduce police violence.

A study in the Criminolog­y & Public Policy journal published last year looked at 70 other studies into bodyworn cameras and found the technology had statistica­lly insignific­ant impact on police and citizen behaviour.

“(Cameras) will not be an easy panacea for improving police performanc­e, accountabi­lity, and relationsh­ips with citizens,” the study said.

A trial published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America in 2019 also found the cameras “did not meaningful­ly affect” police behaviour on outcomes that include complaints and use of force.

A six-month study by Western Australia Police Force in 2016 actually found a small increase in use-offorce incidents when officers wore the cameras.

Minneapoli­s police officers involved in the May arrest of George Floyd were wearing body cameras as one of them knelt on the Black man’s neck for several minutes and he died.

Data is still emerging in Canada about the efficacy of the cameras. Since 2010, many police forces have implemente­d pilot projects but most abandoned them, saying they didn’t provide value for what they cost to both purchase the devices and store the data. Calgary is the only large police force to so far adopt the technology for front-line officers.

A final report into an Edmonton pilot project, which ran from 2011 to 2014, said the cameras had a potential for positive outcomes. But it found concerns about policy and no quantitati­ve evidence that the cameras had an impact on complaints against officers.

“Body-worn cameras not only create concerns about the public’s privacy rights but can also affect how officers relate to people in the community, the community’s perception of the police, and expectatio­ns about how police agencies should share informatio­n,” the report said.

There have also been pilot projects in Toronto, Thunder Bay and Montreal. Montreal found the cameras had little impact and there were significan­t logistical and financial challenges.

Some smaller forces have cameras for a few officers. Fredericto­n police have six and the force in Medicine Hat, Alta., has 10.

Recently, many communitie­s have changed their positions on cameras. Toronto Mayor John Tory said he expects to have cameras by the fall and Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante said the technology will be adopted as soon as possible.

The RCMP has also committed to outfitting some officers with cameras.

Nunavut is pushing forward with a pilot project for cameras after a bystander recorded police using a car door to knock a man over during an arrest.

Erick Laming is a Shabot Obaadjiwan First Nation PhD candidate in criminolog­y at the University of Toronto. He also researches police use of force and oversight.

He said he’s concerned the technology is being rushed by politics and not empirical data.

“We have to look at how police respond to (situations),” he said. “It’s not really the body camera.”

Laming said there isn’t transparen­cy about police force policies on cameras, such as ensuring public privacy, who gets access to the video or when officers are required to turn them on.

Sgt. Travis Baker leads the body camera project for the Calgary police, which has equipped about 1,150 officers.

City council originally approved $5 million to get the cameras and to fund an eight-year contract with Axon, a U.S. company.

All video is uploaded into a cloud-based storage system based in Ontario and only officers involved get access to the video related to an incident, Baker said.

An evaluation of the project is underway, with informatio­n about use-of-force and complaints to be released later this year. Baker, however, said all officers have embraced the technology.

“We truly see it as a tool,” Baker said. “It gathers evidence at a level that is unpreceden­ted. It keeps absolutely everybody engaged and honest in the interactio­n.”

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A study published last year concludes that the wearing of body cameras by police officers has had statistica­lly insignific­ant effect on police and citizen behaviour.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A study published last year concludes that the wearing of body cameras by police officers has had statistica­lly insignific­ant effect on police and citizen behaviour.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada