Santa Fe New Mexican

Minneapoli­s chief tightens officer body camera policy

- By Steve Karnowski

MINNEAPOLI­S — Minneapoli­s police officers will be required to have their body cameras on when they respond to calls and make traffic stops, the acting police chief announced Wednesday, following widespread criticism that two officers involved in the fatal shooting of a 911 caller had not activated their cameras.

The stricter requiremen­ts will take effect Saturday, acting police Chief Medaria Arradondo said at a news conference. Officers who violate them could face discipline ranging from oneday suspension­s to firing, he said.

“Many of our officers are using their cameras a lot, and as they’re intended to be used,” he said. “But there are some officers, quite frankly, that are not using them nearly enough.”

Justine Damond, a 40-year-old spiritual teacher and bride-to-be from Australia, was shot by Officer Mohamed Noor after she called 911 on July 15 to report hearing a possible sexual assault behind her Minneapoli­s home. Noor’s partner, Officer Matthew Harrity, told investigat­ors he was startled by a loud noise right before Damond approached their police SUV. Noor, who was in the passenger seat, shot Damond through the driver-side window.

Mayor Betsy Hodges expressed frustratio­n at the news conference that despite all the time, money and energy the city has put into deploying body cameras, “we did not have body camera footage in an incident where it mattered a great deal.”

Before she resigned at the mayor’s request last week, former police Chief Janee Harteau said the officers’ cameras should have been on.

Minneapoli­s launched a body camera pilot project in November 2014, just months after the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, Mo. Minnesota’s largest city began to roll out the technology last summer, and the cameras have been deployed department­wide for about eight months.

The old policy required officers to turn on their cameras in more than a dozen situations, including for a traffic stop, search of a person or building, any contact involving criminal activity and, if possible, before the use of force.

The amended policy gives officers less leeway. It says they should activate their cameras immediatel­y upon being dispatched to a call, when self-initiating a call such as a traffic stop, before taking any law enforcemen­t action, before making investigat­ory contacts, when any situation becomes adversaria­l, and before assisting citizens except for providing basic advice such as directions.

The language requiring officers to activate their cameras when dispatched is “kind of unique,” said Michael White, a criminolog­y professor at Arizona State University and a co-director of a Justice Department body camera funding assistance program who has reviewed over 100 policies from law enforcemen­t agencies across the country.

Most agencies don’t require officers to activate their cameras until they arrive at the scene, he said. And if the policy had been in place when Damond was killed, it would have been caught on video, he said.

The department also has begun installing technology to turn the devices on automatica­lly when the lights on the squad car are activated, Deputy Chief Mike Kjos said. It’s similar to how the department’s dashboard cameras are activated, he said.

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