Albuquerque Journal

Wait, did we just spend $3.8M on ‘trash’ body cams?

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New Bernalillo County Sheriff John Allen is having a serious case of buyer’s remorse on taxpayers’ behalf — a seven-figure case to be precise.

Allen says the $3.8 million, five-year contract with Utility Inc. — which included 310 BodyWorn cameras, plus uniform tailoring, vehicle cameras front and back, cruiser Wi-Fi hotspots, and holsters that activate the cameras when a firearm is drawn — is for “trash” technology. While former Sheriff Manuel Gonzales championed the cameras as the latest in tech and said his team conducted extensive research before settling on Utility, Allen’s administra­tion says in practice: The microphone­s are affected by wind/area noise. There’s not enough memory to record more than seven hours, when the video is automatica­lly “clipped.”

Uploading takes a long time with good cell service/is impossible without good cell service.

Once uploaded, the videos are inaccessib­le until processed by the company.

There’s no easy way to share long videos with the media or others.

Allen adds he has staff investigat­ing whether the department can get out of the contract and what better options are out there.

Gonzales had been resistant to adopting body cameras for years, despite law enforcemen­t agencies across the nation making them standard equipment and the Albuquerqu­e Police Department mandating them as part of reforms under a settlement agreement with the Department of Justice. He maintained for years there was no evidence they made for better policing and he had other budget priorities. He did not touch $1 million in startup money or $500,000 in recurring annual funds the county set aside for cameras in 2019.

That changed in 2020 when the N.M. Legislatur­e required all law enforcemen­t agencies be outfitted with body cameras. BCSO missed the September 2020 deadline; all deputies had the cameras in January 2021, according to Journal coverage at the time. Allen says the rush to comply resulted in a lack of due diligence: “I think the sheriff’s office … should have had body cams probably two years previous. Then the law came out and they were rushed, and I think that pushed people into the corner to get things done.” Gonzales did not answer a request for comment.

The public has to be asking “why are we years into a multimilli­on-dollar contract and only now finding out the audio on the cameras is often compromise­d and the video sits in the cloud for weeks on end?”

Hint for county officials: There is no good answer to that question.

Yet, Bernalillo County taxpayers — which include all Albuquerqu­e taxpayers — deserve a real answer. And to know that, going forward, when their elected officials spend millions of dollars on public safety, it delivers for our deputies and our residents.

 ?? ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? Bernalillo County Sheriff Manuel Gonzales unveiled the department’s pick for body cameras in July 2020.
ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL Bernalillo County Sheriff Manuel Gonzales unveiled the department’s pick for body cameras in July 2020.

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