Baltimore Sun Sunday

Police body cams should keep rolling

Vignarajah asked Baltimore officer to stop video; sources say recording end up to cop

- By Phillip Jackson and Kevin Rector

Video of Thiru Vignarajah interactin­g with police during a late night traffic stop sparked debate over whether the mayoral candidate and former prosecutor was given special treatment when a police sergeant agreed to turn off his body-worn camera at Vignarajah’s request.

Vignarajah was pulled over around 1 a.m. Sept. 26 by a Baltimore police officer for driving without his headlights in the 2400 block of Greenmount Avenue in East Baltimore, according to footage police released this week to The Baltimore Sun.

The encounter at times got contentiou­s. Eventually, Sgt. Olufemi Akinwande arrives and approaches the car as Vignarajah asks whether his body camera is on. It is “absolutely on,” the sergeant replies. He then asked Vignarajah if he wanted the camera stopped, to which Vignarajah says “if you want to take it off.”

A minute passed and, as the sergeant asked questions, Vignarajah asks that the camera be turned off. The sergeant complied.

According to attorneys, law enforcemen­t officers and the department’s policy manual, the decision whether to stop recording rests solely with officers involved in the stop, not the person being stopped. And the manual makes clear that officers must keep recording in nearly every situation.

“We are supposed to keep it on at all times unless we are speaking to a witness, sexual assault victim or if the camera being on places someone in danger,” Baltimore Police spokesman Donny Moses said Friday.

The Baltimore police manual outlines several scenarios in which it is appropriat­e

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for officers to turn off cameras if requested. But all of those exceptions involve protecting the identity of crime victims or witnesses, confidenti­al informants or people who may want to offer informatio­n on a crime without implicatin­g themselves.

“Once recording with a [body-worn camera] has been initiated, members shall not end the recording until … the event or encounter has fully concluded,” the policy states. “When in doubt, members shall continue to record the interactio­n if it is reasonable to do so.”

The police department announced this week that it is conducting an internal investigat­ion into the events surroundin­g the stop of Vignarajah.

David Shapiro, a Baltimore criminal justice attorney, said he believes Vignarajah was “given a break,” but isn’t sure from the video that it happened “because of who he is.”

Shapiro said cameras should never be turned off during or even immediatel­y after an encounter.

“Once an officer is sent on assignment, whatever it might be, once that call starts, I think the body-worn camera should be activated, and it should stay on once he finishes,” Shapiro said on Friday. “I think each police commission­er should not have a gray area and instead [have] something that applies to everyone, wherever they came from. Whether it’s a mayoral candidate or just John Q. Public in the local neighborho­od.”

After stopping Vignarajah for the headlight violation, police found that the State Police had issued an order to remove the car’s license plates because he had not filed a proper repair form following an earlier traffic ticket.

In an interview Friday, Vignarajah said he thought the traffic stop had concluded when he asked for the camera to be shut down.

“This is what I thought was judgment and discretion of the officers in the field. I called AAA and was waiting for the tow and under the impression that it was over,” he said of the stop.

A tow truck didn’t come because Sgt. Akinwande and the other officers conferred and called the State Police to see if they had any discretion on whether to pull the license plates or to let Vignarajah continue driving home. The State Police response was not audible on the tape, but, after they hung up, officers let him drive away.

Vignarajah said Friday that body-worn cameras are an “important part of police work.” He said he believes the use of cameras is a “common sense” judgment and that officers “have to use” discretion in the field.

The body camera footage does show Vignarajah’s contentiou­s exchanges with the officers, even complainin­g that officers had no right to stop him even though they said his headlights weren’t on. He also questioned the State Police order to take his plates.

At one point, Vignarajah apologized for being “snippy.”

The officers noticed. After Sgt. Akinwande asks Officer Mark Smith if Vignarajah was “belligeren­t,” and Smith kind of demurs, Akinwande walks off. Then Sgt. Cameron Battle and Smith have an exchange.

“He was belligeren­t?” Battle says.

“He wasn’t belligeren­t, but he was trying to…” Smith starts.

“…borderline disrespect­ful, trying to bait you into a…” Battle interjects.

“Right,” Smith says.

“OK, I got you,” Battle says. “I’m glad you were smarter than to get baited into something.”

Smith also said he didn’t know who Vignarajah was.

“It doesn’t matter who he is,” Akinwande replied.

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