Global Times

New York to equip all officers, detectives with body cameras by end of 2018

-

The New York Police Department, the largest city police force in the United States, announced Tuesday that all patrol officers and detectives would be equipped with body cameras by the end of 2018.

Officials said the rollout was a year ahead of schedule and expressed hope that it would be a decision replicated by other forces around the country, amid ongoing outcry over the deaths of unarmed – often African American – men at the hands of police in disputed circumstan­ces.

New York’s police force began a body camera pilot program in December 2014, six months after the death of father-of-six Eric Garner in a police chokehold was among those that sparked nationwide protests.

The accelerati­on of the program will see 18,000 officers outfitted and trained by the end of the year, de Blasio said. Police commission­er James O’Neill said 2,200 police officers currently wear the body cameras.

The preliminar­y budget for the accelerate­d rollout includes $5.9 million this year, $12 million in 2019 and $9.5 million in 2020, officials said.

“We’re helping to make New York City fairer faster, and growing trust between police and communitie­s,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Four of the last five officer-related shootings in New York were captured by body cameras, O’Neill said.

He said “the advantages far outweigh the disadvanta­ges” with cameras a de-escalator and complaints quickly resolved. He added that they help to keep members of the public and police safe, drive down crime and build trust.

Eric Adams, president of New York’s most populous borough Brooklyn, estimated that the cameras would save the city “millions of dollars in unjustifia­ble law suits.”

The tiny, flat body cameras look like pagers and can be clipped onto uniforms to record police interactio­ns and activities in real time.

The devices, which are far cheaper than dashboard cameras, are a relatively recent innovation in the United States but the New York agreement is likely to increase chances they will become standard equipment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China