Albuquerque Journal

Charlotte’s policy on body cameras doesn’t end questions on shootings

In last six fatal shootings, five firing officers didn’t record video

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The fatal shooting of a black man by a police officer in Charlotte is only the latest shooting to raise questions about how the department uses body cameras.

Six people were fatally shot since body cameras were given to all patrol officers about a year ago. But the officers who fired the fatal shots in five of those cases — including Keith Lamont Scott’s — weren’t using the cameras.

The weekend release of police footage showing the shooting of Scott left questions in many people’s minds — including whether he was holding a gun. The footage includes body camera video from another officer, but not the black officer who fatally wounded Scott.

Scott’s family and advocacy groups complain the department divulged only about three minutes of footage from two cameras. They have urged the police department to release all other video footage it has, as well as audio recordings of communicat­ions that could clarify how the situation unfolded. A media coalition is also requesting more footage.

Police Chief Kerr Putney has said the officer who shot Scott wasn’t wearing a body camera that day because he’s part of a tactical unit.

“Our tactical units don’t all have bodyworn cameras at this point,” Putney told reporters Saturday, adding they are to receive them in the future. He said he was previously reluctant to make officers in high-risk operations wear cameras showing tactics and locations.

The department said plaincloth­es officers who saw Scott with a gun and marijuana left the area to put on vests identifyin­g them as police before confrontin­g him.

If the officers “had the foresight to put on their police vest, why did you not put on your body cam?” asked Corine Mack, president of the Charlotte NAACP chapter.

Susanna Birdsong, a legal policy expert for the American Civil Liberties Union, questioned whether the department is violating its own body camera policy instituted in April 2015.

The policy, according to the department’s site, states the cameras must be activated in situations including arrests and encounters with suspicious people. It doesn’t address whether tactical units must wear them.

Referring to the Scott case and others, Mack said she’s angry not all units have the cameras yet.

“It speaks to the culture of the police department that even when policies and procedures are put in place, that they feel they don’t have to follow them,” she said. “This is serious, that there is no record of a life being taken. … People want to know why we don’t trust the police department?”

In three previous cases from December and January, the Mecklenbur­g County district attorney cleared officers who killed suspects who fired shots first. In one case, an officer wasn’t wearing a body camera because he was working off-duty security in uniform at a mall. A second case involved a tactical unit not equipped with body cameras. Footage existed in the third case but was poor quality, authoritie­s said.

An April case involved SWAT members, one of the Charlotte units that hasn’t worn body cameras. A June case involved patrol officers, but multiple media outlets reported that the officers were not using body cameras.

 ?? JEFF SINER/THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER/AP ?? A man speaks with Charlotte police officers after he was stopped Sunday during a protest outside Bank of America Stadium, where a pro football game was being played.
JEFF SINER/THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER/AP A man speaks with Charlotte police officers after he was stopped Sunday during a protest outside Bank of America Stadium, where a pro football game was being played.

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