The Columbus Dispatch

Prison systems adding body-worn cameras

Some say money would be better spent on hiring more staff

- Andrew Welsh-huggins

A growing number of states’ prison systems are outfitting guards with body-worn cameras, even in correction­al environmen­ts already covered by thousands of stationary security cameras.

Agencies hope the extra cameras will help reduce violence and hold both inmates and guards accountabl­e, although experts and unions question their usefulness on top of existing cameras.

The Ohio Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction hopes to announce by year’s end which of four companies has won a contract estimated at about $17 million a year.

The Ohio agency started examining the issue after a California judge ordered body-worn cameras for guards at a state prison in San Diego following allegation­s of abuse of prisoners with disabiliti­es. California later expanded the cameras to five other prisons.

The death of an Ohio inmate in January during a scuffle with guards sped up the examinatio­n into using the cameras although the pilot program was already in the works, said Annette Chamberssm­ith, director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction.

The system already has about 6,000 cameras in place in Ohio’s 28 prisons. But blind spots exist, as well as situations in which a body camera will help get to the truth, including whether an inmate or a guard is at fault, Chamberssm­ith said.

“When you have cameras that are filming an incident, you don’t have to rely on memory or perhaps that tunnel vision that someone gets when they’re recounting an incident,” she said. “You can just see the totality of it.”

Two videos provided by the agency show the difference in perspectiv­es that body-worn cameras can provide. As a fight broke out between two inmates at the Ohio State Penitentia­ry on July 27, a stationary camera positioned above the fray provided a clear view, but without

audio.

A guard’s body-worn camera capturing the same fight provided a closer view of the confused situation, along with sound. “Lock the doors,” a guard can be heard yelling, and “Stop” multiple times, before another guard uses pepper spray on the inmates. In the body-worn camera version, it’s also easier to see and hear a guard gesture at a colleague to let another guard remove one of the inmates first.

The union representi­ng prison employees in Ohio is skeptical of the cameras, saying the money could be better spent on hiring more guards. That’s especially true given how many stationary cameras are already in place, said Christophe­r Mabe, president of the Ohio Civil Service Employees Associatio­n.

“Right now we’re fighting to keep people employed in the department of correction­s, because of the tight job market,” Mabe said. “Should we be putting more money into retention of officers and hiring of officers and hiring of

staff, as opposed to allocating money for technology that is just redundant?”

The state prison system has about 6,130 correction­s officers, down from around 6,660 in 2019. The inmate population has fallen during the same time period, from around 48,000 to around 43,000 prisoners.

The Ohio chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union is keeping an eye on the state’s plan, with questions including the circumstan­ces under which guards are allowed to deactivate the cameras, and how long the prison system will retain the video, said Gary Daniels, the chapter’s top Ohio lobbyist. The latter question is important, given the state’s two-year window for filing civil liberties lawsuits, he said.

The Georgia Bureau of Prisons piloted the concept last year and plans to outfit guards in two prisons this year and another two next year. Florida doesn’t use them across the board, but since October 2020 has equipped specially trained officers at its 35 prisons with body cameras that automatica­lly turn on when those officers activate stun guns.

New York state began piloting bodyworn cameras in 2016 and expanded the test with an $835,000 federal grant. The system, costing about $4.2 million, has about 2,500 body-worn cameras in use in eight prisons, including the three women’s prisons, with plans to expand.

Virginia is planning to provide cameras to supervisor­s at high-security facilities, some members of teams that enter cells to extract inmates, and handlers of patrol and drug-sniffing dogs.

Wisconsin began outfitting officers at its six maximum-security prisons and one juvenile facility after the Legislatur­e provided the agency with an initial $591,400 in 2017 in hopes of reducing assaults.

The agency now deploys about 200 body-worn cameras in the six prisons and about 100 in the Lincoln Hills & Copper Lake Schools juvenile facility, at a cost of about $895 per camera. Prisons spokespers­on John Beard said that one downside is the view is sometimes obscured during close-up interactio­ns with an inmate, but the audio is easily heard.

“Follow-up of allegation­s are easily completed by reviewing the incident and verifying if an investigat­ion is needed or if the alleged incident didn’t occur,” Beard said.

Just as widespread use of body-worn cameras by police officers hasn’t reduced instances of use of force, bodyworn cameras in prisons are unlikely to have a big impact, especially with the presence of so many stationary cameras, said criminal justice analyst Bryce Peterson.

Nearly all prison incidents are already recorded, and blind spots aren’t typically in places where a guard will be present to record illicit activity, including drug sales or a fight, said Peterson, a research scientist for CNA Corp., which focuses on improving safety. He said changes in use-of-force policy, better training and efforts to retain staff are more likely to reduce prison violence.

It’s likely that in some prisons, adding body-worn cameras, “just because it’s new interventi­on, it’s sort of a shock to the system and will have an impact,” Peterson said. “But I don’t think it’s a long-term cure for these issues.”

 ?? JAY LAPRETE/AP FILE ?? Annette Chambers-smith, director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction, speaks in Columbus, Ohio. A growing number of state prison systems are outfitting guards with body-worn cameras. Chambers-smith says the cameras can cover blind spots and also act as a preemptive tool against violence if inmates know they're being filmed.
JAY LAPRETE/AP FILE Annette Chambers-smith, director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction, speaks in Columbus, Ohio. A growing number of state prison systems are outfitting guards with body-worn cameras. Chambers-smith says the cameras can cover blind spots and also act as a preemptive tool against violence if inmates know they're being filmed.

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