The Signal

Supes to vote on body cameras

Devices would record deputy interactio­ns with the public

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

County supervisor­s are expected to vote on a motion today calling for sheriff’s deputies to begin wearing body cameras.

In the spirit of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, the body-worn cameras would record all interactio­ns deputies have with the public.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s is expected to consider a motion submitted by Supervisor­s Mark Ridley-Thomas and Hilda Solis for the phased implementa­tion of a body-worn camera program in the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Access to the camera footage would be available to prosecutor­s with the Los Angeles County

District Attorney’s Office, as well as the public defender and alternate public defender.

Endorsing the proposal would require a number of county officials such as the inspector general, sheriff, public defender, alternate public defender, district attorney, chief executive officer, county counsel and Civilian Oversight Commission to report back, in writing, in 90 days, and every 60 days after that, on the program’s progress.

In their motion, RidleyThom­as and Solis call the body cams a “widely used tool across the country to improve accountabi­lity and transparen­cy of law enforcemen­t.”

They also point out that the county has been considerin­g body-worn cameras since the Citizens’ Commission on Jail Violence recommende­d, in 2012, that the LASD use them to address problemati­c use of force.

A constantly changing technology and shifting projected costs, however, have delayed the body cams being worn.

In July 2018, however, the Civilian Oversight Commission approved a report recommendi­ng the county move forward with body cams.

A month later, supervisor­s unanimousl­y approved a Ridley-Thomas/Solis motion to hire an expert consultant to make recommenda­tions. That expert was the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police.

The IACP unveiled its report in June, along with a number of recommenda­tions.

On the question of deputies being allowed to review footage shot by the body cameras, the associatio­n said: “Policy should direct when deputies activate their body-worn cameras and procedures for deactivati­on. For routine calls for services, deputies should be allowed to access footage to assist in writing their reports.”

“For critical incidents, such as an officer-involved shooting, IACP notes this is the most sensitive body-worn camera policy topic,” the IACP wrote.

Two agencies, however, disagree with that recommenda­tion.

Both the Office of the Inspector General and the Civilian Oversight Commission recommend not allowing deputies to review critical incident footage until they have written a preliminar­y report or given a statement.

The IACP looked at “pros and cons,” Ridley-Thomas and Solis noted in their motion.

The IACP report notes: “In general, body-worn camera footage should be considered investigat­ive records and not subject to release, unless required by law or court order. Based on best practice and newly enacted law enforcemen­t transparen­cy legislatio­n, IACP’s recommenda­tion is to release critical incident footage within 10 days following a written Public Records Act request, unless it would interfere with an active criminal or administra­tive investigat­ion.”

On the question of cost, the IACP considers the proposed $34.4 million for the bodycam program with 33 new fulltime staff reasonable given the scale of the sheriff’s patrol operations.

The cost includes $20.2 million in one-time costs related to the purchase of equipment, infrastruc­ture upgrades, patrol personnel training, $14.2 million in ongoing costs for staffing and software licenses, and internet, cellular and cloud services.

The IACP also recommende­d setting aside a $3 million contingenc­y reserve should unanticipa­ted costs arise during implementa­tion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States