Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Some police trying cameras on guns

- By Dave Collins

A small number of police department­s are showing interest in a new type of video camera that can be mounted directly on officers’ guns, saying it may offer a better view of officer-involved shootings than body cameras. Some law enforcemen­t officials and civil rights groups are skeptical.

Among the cons, they point out, is that gun cameras start recording only after weapons are removed from holsters and won’t capture what led to officers drawing their guns, or other interactio­ns with the public. They also say they should be used only as a complement to body cameras.

Besides the better view, supporters say the pros include lower video storage costs because gun cameras record much less often than body cameras, and a feature in some models that instantly alerts dispatcher­s and nearby police via wifi and Bluetooth when officers draw their weapons and may need help.

Officers’ arms, walls and other objects can get in the way of body cameras, as they did in the New York City Police Department’s fatal shooting of Miguel Richards last month. Officers’ body cameras also may not be turned on, gun camera proponents say.

“It’s kind of cutting-edge technology now,” said Assistant Chief Michael Kovacsev, of the St. Petersburg, Florida, Police Department, which tested gun cameras this year and is also deciding whether to use body cameras.

“One thing about the gun camera is you can actually see what’s going on,” Kovacsev said. “You actually get to see the viewpoint of the officer where the weapon is pointed.”

Gun-mounted cameras have been around for years, mostly for sport shooting enthusiast­s, but have not caught on with law enforcemen­t. Some police department­s are using cameras mounted on their stun guns that activate when the safety switches are turned off.

The cameras cost around $500, about the same as some body cameras, and mount under the gun barrel. Some also have highpowere­d lights so officers do not have to hold both a gun and a flashlight.

Other department­s planning to test gun cameras include the West Hennepin Public Safety Department, which serves Maple Plain and Independen­ce, Minnesota, about 20 miles west of Minneapoli­s, and police in Williams, Arizona, about 30 miles west of Flagstaff, according to manufactur­ers.

Executives at two companies that make gun cameras, Viridian Weapon Technologi­es in Minneapoli­s and Centinel Solutions in Palm Beach, Florida, said that several department­s have tested or plan to test their devices, and that many more have expressed interest. But they would identify only a few of their clients.

There doesn’t appear to be any gun camera footage of a police shooting yet because police agencies have not formally approved use of the cameras and no shootings happened during trials.

Officials at larger police department­s, including New York and Los Angeles, said they have no plans to use gun cameras.

“If you put a camera on a gun, it’s only going to work when you pull your gun,” said Deputy Chief Timothy Trainor of the NYPD, which is expanding its use of body cameras. “We’re more concerned about capturing (all) interactio­ns between the community that we are tasked to serve and the officers.”

The NAACP and the American Civil Liberties Union both say gun cameras should not be used instead of body cameras.

“I think there’s a lot of context you’re going to be missing with the gunmounted cameras,” said Ngozi Ndulue, senior director of criminal justice 14 Thomas Street, Kingston www.frankguido­slittleita­ly.com (845) 340-1682 programs at the NAACP. “I think we need to focus more on the policies for implementi­ng body cameras and making sure officers are turning on their body cameras.”

There have been several instances of officers’ body cameras not being turned on or malfunctio­ning in high-profile shooting cases, including the fatal shooting of an Australian woman by Minneapoli­s police in July, Ndulue said.

Justine Damond, who had called 911 for help, was shot by one of two responding officers whose body cameras that were not switched on. A prosecutor is considerin­g charges, and body camera footage would have been key in determinin­g any wrongdoing.

“There’s no guarantee that the gun cameras are going to be better than other cameras,” said Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst for the ACLU. “If there was a shooting, I would want more video than just the gun camera video.”

In the New York police shooting Sept. 6, officers’ body cameras showed the tense buildup to the killing but did not capture a clear picture of the moment when officers opened fire on Richards. Officers’ arms and walls partly obscured their body cameras. Police said they opened fire when Richards pointed what turned out to be a fake gun at them. A prosecutor is investigat­ing.

The New York shooting shows the potential value of a gun camera, said Max Kramer, chief executive officer of Centinel Solutions.

“It shows the final mile of what happened,” he said. “It potentiall­y gives you peace of mind. This is just another tool to enhance that transparen­cy.”

Brian Hedeen, president and chief executive of Viridian Weapon Technologi­es, said gun cameras can also save police department­s money in video storage costs because they produce less than 1 percent of the data body cameras do because they’re not activated as much.

Video storage costs for body cameras, cited by some department­s as a reason for not deploying them, can run tens of thousands of dollars a year for midsize department­s and hundreds of thousands of dollars a year for larger agencies.

Collins reported from Hartford, Connecticu­t.

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