The Arizona Republic

Minnesota case underscore­s need for body-camera use

- KYLE POTTER

MINNEAPOLI­S - Police and protesters heralded the arrival of the body camera as a critical window into officers’ everyday activities after the unrest in Ferguson, Missouri.

But as the killing of an Australian woman by a Minneapoli­s officer over the weekend showed, the technology depends on officers turning on the devices. And often they don’t do so.

Officer Mohamed Noor fatally shot 40-yearold Justine Damond on Saturday night while responding to an emergency call Damond placed to report a possible sexual assault near her house. Like the rest of the city’s officers, both Noor and his partner had body cameras but didn’t turn them on until after the shooting. It’s not clear why the officers hadn’t switched on their cameras.

Damond’s death offered a tragic example of a common problem department­s have grappled with in the rush to equip officers with body cameras. Though millions of dollars in federal and state grants have helped make the cameras standard equipment in major cities, their effectiven­ess still often depends on the officers who wear them.

A Department of Justice investigat­ion chided police officers in Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico — an early adopter of the technology — for failing to turn on their cameras, citing a lack of both training and supervisor enforcemen­t.

An outside investigat­or found that Denver police officers captured just 1 in 4 use-of-force incidents during a 2014 pilot project, in large part because of officers forgetting to turn their cameras on.

Data from March released by the Minneapoli­s Police Department and published by television station KSTP show that officers wearing body cameras there recorded a little less than 20 minutes of footage for every eighthour shift. Criminal justice experts said that number seemed low and was cause for a review that is underway among top city officials.

“I think all cities are in this learning curve where they’re having to see if officers are turning on their cameras,” said Chuck Wexler, executive director for the Police Executive Research Forum. “This is still a new technology. This is going to take some time to make it part of the DNA of what the police do.”

Cities across the nation have struggled to balance the need to capture footage with protecting individual­s’ privacy and safeguardi­ng against high storage costs for terabytes of recordings. The response has been narrow requiremen­ts for when an officer needs to flip on his or her camera.

Minneapoli­s launched a body camera pilot project in November 2014, just months after the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson and the initial unrest that gripped that St. Louis suburb. Minnesota’s largest city began to roll out the technology throughout the department last summer.

Noor would have been among the last officers in Minneapoli­s to get the equipment because his precinct received cameras in October.

The department requires officers to turn on their cameras in more than a dozen instances, including for a traffic stop, search of a person or building, any contact involving criminal activity and before the use of force. In the last instance, the policy says if officers can’t turn cameras on before using force they should do so afterward as soon as it’s safe.

The cameras aren’t intended only to catch wrongdoing; they are also seen as a way to protect officers from being unfairly accused. Just this week, an Alabama police chief said body-camera video cleared his officers after false claims circulated on social media that they had beaten a suspect and tossed him from a bridge.

On the night she was killed, Damond had called 911 to report a possible sexual assault near an alley close to her home in an affluent southweste­rn Minneapoli­s neighborho­od. According to Noor’s partner, Officer Matthew Harrity, the pair heard a loud sound as Damond approached the squad car.

Noor fired from the passenger seat and struck Damond in the abdomen with one shot. She died at the scene.

State investigat­ors said both officers turned on their body cameras eventually, but not until well after the shooting.

Both officers are on paid administra­tive leave.

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