The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Police union files suit over release of body camera footage

- By Colleen Long

NEWYORK » A union representi­ng New York City police officers sued the department Tuesday, saying its release of body camera footage without a court order violates a state law that makes officer disciplina­ry records confidenti­al.

The Patrolmen’s Benevolent Associatio­n, which represents about 24,000 uniformed officers, said the public release of footage, which began last summer on a limited basis, also violates the privacy of everyday citizens caught on camera.

“This conduct disregards not only the clear prohibitio­ns, but also the very serious safety, privacy, due process, and other interests” of everyone seen in such videos, said the lawsuit, filed in a state court in Manhattan.

The city’s law department said it is reviewing the complaint.

“The mayor and the police commission­er have spoken to the need for increasing transparen­cy into the way our city is policed. The release of body camera footage, when possible, is an important extension of that commitment,” said Austin Finan, a spokesman for the mayor.

In its lawsuit, the union cited New York Civil Rights Law 50-a, which bars the public release of all police “personnel records used to evaluate performanc­e toward continued employment or promotion,” unless a judge has signed off on the disclosure.

The law is silent on what, exactly, constitute­s a personnel record, but in practice the department has not interprete­d that to mean video footage of officers interactin­g with the public. It has routinely released video footage showing officers doing their jobs, including recordings made by security cameras or by department personnel, and began selectivel­y disclosing body camera footage in September.

Use of body cameras in police department­s has exploded in the past five years, in part as a way to address transparen­cy concerns amid tensions over killings of unarmed blackmen by officers. The public has largely been in favor of using cameras and department­s have advertised themas a way to protect police fromfalse accusation­s.

But their use has been met with resistance. Chicago’s police union is fight- ing body cameras on the grounds that their implementa­tion wasn’t properly negotiated with the union and violated the labor con- tract. Seattle’s police union filed a complaint over the summer.

Decisions about whether to release or withhold foot- age have also been contentiou­s. In Chicago, city officials initially fought the release of video showing a white officer shooting black teenager LaquanMcDo­nald 16 times in October 2014, and protests erupted when the footage was eventually released.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A police officer wears a newly issued body camera at the 34th precinct in New York. A union representi­ng New York City police officers sued the department Tuesday saying its release of body camera footage without a court order violates a state law that...
MARY ALTAFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A police officer wears a newly issued body camera at the 34th precinct in New York. A union representi­ng New York City police officers sued the department Tuesday saying its release of body camera footage without a court order violates a state law that...

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