The Mercury News

De Anza College police officers start wearing body cameras

- By Khalida Sarwari ksarwari @bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Khalida Sarwari at 408-200-1055.

CUPERTINO » Foothill-De Anza Community College District police officers this month started wearing body cameras and report it’s been smooth filming so far.

Every one of the department’s 22 officers, including those in community service, received a new AXON Body-2 camera on March 7, said Ron Levine, the district’s police chief.

“I think that the bodyworn camera program will be beneficial for the transparen­cy of our community and to help improve relations with our campus community,” Levine said. “In general, they are an outstandin­g tool that provides a necessary conduit for law enforcemen­t to record actions with the community and it’s a safeguard, both for the public and for the officers.”

The officers find them helpful, too, although it took some getting used to at first. Jeff Ricketts, a sergeant who’s been with the department four years and previously was a police officer at West Valley College and the San Jose Police Department, said he had to overcome some initial selfconsci­ousness but once he adjusted he found that having a camera on him actually made his job easier.

“The great thing about (the cameras) is you always have independen­t control with you at all times now,” Ricketts said. “I say police work is not always poetry; it sometimes just happens. It’s nice having an independen­t witness always with you.”

Like all police department­s, Levine said he occasional­ly receives complaints from residents regarding his officers’ behavior. He’s hoping the cameras will help cut down those complaints.

Officers are required to wear the cameras at all times, from the time they clock in to when they’re off duty, Levine said. There are a handful of occasions where officers have the discretion to turn the cameras off, he said, such as inside homes, locker rooms, hospitals or jails.

While members of the public are informed that they’re being recorded, they don’t have the right to tell an officer to turn the camera off, Levine said.

“There’s no expectatio­n of privacy in public when you’re dealing with a police officer,” he said. “Just like we can’t tell a citizen not to record us in public.”

Ricketts said cameras help show the officer’s side of the story.

“It’s very common when you’re on a call for service that two or three people are recording, so I’m used to people recording us all the time and this is just another camera recording,” he said.

The cameras, which are no bigger than a box of cigarettes, record audio as well as video. They have a wideangle view, Levine said, and are capable of capturing as much of the officer’s view as possible. Officers have been instructed to turn the cameras on at the start of every interactio­n; a 30-second buffer feature captures video footage 30 seconds prior to the start of recording.

All footage gets uploaded to the cloud, where the clips are categorize­d for easy access. The files have a shelflife of one year before they’re purged, with the exception of those used in active criminal investigat­ions.

Elias Sayed, a political science student at De Anza, said he was pleased to see the body-worn cameras deployed at his school.

“It’s nice having that extra reassuranc­e,” he said. “We have a lot of students of color coming from marginaliz­ed communitie­s and though a body camera doesn’t directly protect them, it adds a sense of security and accountabi­lity.”

The department submitted a grant proposal to the U.S. Department of Justice in 2016 for the purchase of body-worn camera technology. The grant, which was around $27,000, covered half the cost of the cameras. The college district’s police department pitched in for the other half.

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