East Bay Times

Antioch police to get body cameras

City will spend $1.4 million on hardware, which includes car cameras

- By Judith Prieve jprieve@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Antioch police soon will be equipped with body-worn and car cameras after the City Council unanimousl­y approved a $1.4 million, five-year purchase contract with Axon Industries and $1.3 million for support staff to handle the new data.

The proposal was part of a police reform package Mayor Lamar Thorpe and the City Council advanced during a marathon special meeting two weeks earlier. The fiveyear contract with Axon covers all hardware and software updates and replacemen­t parts.

“This is an important night,” Thorpe said of the packed agenda, which also included other reform

discussion­s. “So that passes, we are officially a city with body cameras — 10 years overdue, but we got it done.”

Though many believe police body-worn cameras are vital to improving police accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, Antioch police never had them because of the considerab­le cost and issues such as storage and usage policies. But after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, an uptick in local crime and two recent in-custody deaths, calls for police cameras here escalated.

A number of residents expressed their support at the council meeting for cameras but questioned how they’d be used.

“Body cameras and dash cameras seem a great first step if used appropriat­ely with clear guidelines and policies,” said Stefania Cargnello, an aunt of Angelo Quinto, who died in December after an encounter with police during a mental health crisis. “They (cameras) bring truth, clarity and efficient resolution­s in stressful situations that are clouded in controvers­y.”

Diana Collins Puente, another aunt of Quinto, reiterated her family’s support for police body-worn and dash cameras.

“However, they are also tools that can be implemente­d to prosecute ordinary people rather than implement police transparen­cy and accountabi­lity,” she said. “We strongly support body cameras but not at the expense of mental health crisis response. We believe that both can and must be done with urgency.”

Resident Manny Soliz asked if the cameras could be later adapted to work with new Tasers with Bluetooth technology.

Others worried about the cost and said they did not want the expense to come from the police budget.

“Do not undermine the will of the citizens,” Jackie Hooke said. “Find the money without hurting the officers.”

Thorpe, however, said City Manager Ron Bernal would make adjustment­s to the budget this first year to fund the cameras. The council in subsequent years would have to decide where the money would come from.

“We’re not cutting any other programs to fund any of these programs; it’s coming from the general fund reserves,” the mayor said.

Besides the forward-facing body cameras, the proposed Axon program includes a car camera system with two cameras, one mounted inside and another in the backseat. Both can record audio inside and will upload data to a secure cloud-based storage system, according to Lt. Joe Vigil.

The Axon camera platform allows officers to capture photograph­s, videos and audio evidence in the field and directly upload them, he said. Besides manually activating the cameras, officers must begin recording when the police car lights and siren are activated or a gun is removed from a holster, he added.

Vigil said Axom could get officers equipped and trained with the bodyworn cameras in as little as 60 days, but the car cameras would take longer. Still, the entire program could be up and running by August.

“I appreciate the acceptance for a body-worn camera program and I very much look forward to implementi­ng that program here at the Antioch Police Department and very much thank you or your support in this,” police Chief Tammany Brooks said following the vote.

Brooks also asked for the addition of two records staff members — to be paid a total of $263,819 in salary and benefits the first year — to handle the increased records. The council unanimousl­y approved his request.

In a related matter, the council voted 4-1, with Councilwom­an Tamisha Torres Walker dissenting, to buy the Police Department three years of Peregrine Technologi­es software for $381,000, in addition to $15,000 for the new police camera software.

“It (Peregrine) provides a one-stop shop for organizing that data, it pulls from all that informatio­n that we need from all those powerful platforms that we have to the user so they are able to vet that informatio­n and use it in real time,” police Lt. John Fortner said.

Fortner said the platform has only recently been made available and allows fact sharing with other agencies.

“We have never had a platform that pulls all of our technology together and allows us to share informatio­n securely and provide real-time informatio­n to officers in the field,” he said.

“On a multitude of fronts — whether it is crime-solving, whether it’s type of independen­t investigat­ions — this is the technology that allows us to get this informatio­n seamlessly, to create a process to the district attorney and other agencies to ensure that informatio­n is getting there in a timely fashion,” Thorpe added.

“On a multitude of fronts — whether it is crime-solving, whether it’s type of independen­t investigat­ions — this is the technology that allows us to get this informatio­n seamlessly, to create a process to the district attorney and other agencies to ensure that informatio­n is getting there in a timely fashion.”

— Lamar Thorpe, mayor of Antioch

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