Los Angeles Times

Border Patrol rejects use of body cameras

Internal review finds the devices aren’t designed for agents’ working conditions.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske and Brian Bennett molly.hennessy-fiske@latimes.com brian.bennett@latimes.com Hennessy-Fiske reported from Houston and Bennett from Washington.

HOUSTON — An internal review by U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials found that staff at the nation’s largest law enforcemen­t agency shouldn’t be required to wear body cameras in the field, despite the growing popularity of the devices among police and advocates.

According to a copy reviewed by the Los Angeles Times, officials found the cameras’ benefits were outweighed by their drawbacks, including cost, damage to morale, vulnerabil­ity to hacking and the agents’ rugged working conditions.

Officials field-tested cameras on 90 agents and officers across the country and consulted Los Angeles and New Orleans police. After a yearlong review, they found that most body cameras “were not designed to meet the rigors required by CBP officers and agents” and that they had “limited effectiven­ess.”

Rather than distribute body cameras to agents, even as a pilot project, the report recommends a “riskbased deployment” based on “operationa­l need.”

The findings were summarized in an August draft report that’s still subject to approval by Commission­er R. Gil Kerlikowsk­e, who last year announced plans to test the cameras.

Jenny Burke, a spokeswoma­n for Customs and Border Protection, said in an email that the agency “has been transparen­t in providing regular updates on the status of the Body Worn Camera feasibilit­y study since it began” and that the draft report “is a dated version that does not reflect the agency’s deliberati­ons over the past months or conclusion­s of CBP leadership.”

Burke did not clarify what the agency’s leaders had concluded.

The Border Patrol employs about 60,000 people, and Kerlikowsk­e has not said whether he plans to distribute the cameras and, if so, whether they would go to the roughly 21,000 agents on the southern border or the 24,000 officers at the country’s ports of entry.

“Putting these in place, as you know, is not only complicate­d, it’s also expensive,” Kerlikowsk­e said at a briefing last year. “We want to make sure we do this right.”

President Obama supports the use of body cameras by police, and his administra­tion has pledged millions of dollars to local department­s that have adopted them, particular­ly after clashes between police and protesters last year in Ferguson, Mo., prompted a national discussion about racial profiling and use of force by police.

Violent incidents along the border remain a significan­t problem for the agency. Assaults on agents are reported daily — 390 so far this year, up 5% from 373 assaults in all of 2014.

Three people have been killed in altercatio­ns with Border Patrol agents along the U.S. border in 2015. Last year, four people were shot to death by Border Patrol agents, according to a tally kept by the American Civil Liberties Union’s Regional Center for Border Rights in Las Cruces, N.M.

“Body-worn cameras have the potential to provide huge benefits for Customs and Border Protection and the public,” said Jacinta Ma, director of policy and advocacy at the Washington­based National Immigratio­n Forum, which released a report Friday recommendi­ng the agency start using the cameras.

“As the largest law enforcemen­t agency in the country, CBP has an opportunit­y to step up,” Ma said, adding that body cameras “will help keep people safe — agents, officers and the public alike.”

But the agency may face resistance from Border Patrol staff and their union, the National Border Patrol Council. Union officials have expressed concern in the past that video from the cameras could be used to discipline agents or force them from their jobs.

“We haven’t received the parameters in which they will be used or if they can hold up to the conditions in which we work,” said Chris Cabrera, a union spokesman based in McAllen, Texas. “Until we know more, it would be hard to say if it is a good or bad idea. There are, however, better ways the money could be spent. We are technologi­cally deficient in many areas.”

 ?? Don Bartletti
Los Angeles Times ?? ASSAULTS on border agents are reported daily — 390 so far this year. Advocates say body cameras would help keep agents and the people they encounter safe.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ASSAULTS on border agents are reported daily — 390 so far this year. Advocates say body cameras would help keep agents and the people they encounter safe.

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