Los Angeles Times

LAPD to deploy body cameras by summer

The first 860 devices will be given to officers in the Newton, Mission and Central Traffic Divisions.

- By Kate Mather kate.mather@latimes.com

Los Angeles police officials said the department has received its first batch of body cameras and hopes to deploy the new technology this summer.

Although the department has not finalized its policy for the cameras, it is moving forward with “quite a bit of infrastruc­ture work” to prepare the divisions that will use them first, LAPD’s chief informatio­n officer told the Police Commission last week.

Before the devices can be used, department officials must install the docking stations that will charge the cameras and upload their footage, Chief Informatio­n Officer Maggie Goodrich told commission­ers. That installati­on also includes potential upgrades to power feeds and network connectivi­ty at each of the divisions, she said.

Those efforts are scheduled to take two or three months to complete.

Goodrich said the first 860 cameras the department received — purchased with about $1.5 million in private donations — will be given to officers assigned to the Newton, Mission and Central Traffic divisions, along with some specialize­d units such as SWAT.

Newton officers will get the cameras first, probably sometime in early summer, Goodrich said. The remaining cameras are scheduled to be rolled out by fall.

The LAPD and the union that represents the rankand-file officers are still negotiatin­g the camera policy in a confidenti­al process, Goodrich said Tuesday. Department officials and commission­ers have said that no cameras would be used until that policy has been completed and approved by the Police Commission.

With an ambitious plan to put a body camera on every officer, the LAPD is poised to become the largest law enforcemen­t agency in the country to use the technology on a wide scale. In December, Mayor Eric Garcetti announced the city would buy about 7,000 cameras.

Before then, private funds were raised to pay for a much smaller number of cameras — the 860 devices the LAPD received last week.

After officers in the Central Bureau tested three different models, the department decided on the Taser Axon device. An LAPD report presented to the commission Tuesday described that model as “secure, reliable and easy to use.”

Police use of body cameras has drawn significan­t attention amid a national conversati­on about police and community relations. Advocates say the cameras will help bring clarity to controvers­ial officer-civilian encounters, guard against officer misconduct and help clear those falsely accused of wrongdoing.

But not everyone supports the LAPD’s use of the cameras.

At two community meetings held this year, some residents raised questions over citizen privacy and public access to the footage. The LAPD has said it does not plan on publicly releasing the recordings unless they are part of a criminal or civil court matter.

This month, an LAPD sergeant and officer wearing body cameras were among those who fatally shot a man in downtown’s skid row. Many activists have called on the department to release the footage of the encounter, which drew internatio­nal attention.

The forthcomin­g deployment of the body cameras comes as the LAPD also expands its use of cameras in patrol cars. LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said the technology advancemen­t represente­d a “total revolution in policing.”

“It’s not only a great tool for policing, it’s a great tool for gathering evidence, but it’s also a great tool for building trust,” Beck told reporters. “We’re on the leading edge.”

 ?? Marcus Yam
Los Angeles Times ?? THE LAPD has decided to equip officers with the Taser Axon camera, which is secure and easy to use.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times THE LAPD has decided to equip officers with the Taser Axon camera, which is secure and easy to use.

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