A REPORTONBODYWORNCAMERAS
BYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ
1
Manning&Kass,Ellrod,Ramirez,TresterLLP
15
th
Floorat801Tower
801SouthFigueroaStreet
LosAngeles,California90017
2136246900
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|2
CONTENTS
BODYWORNCAMERAS..............................................................................................................................3
CALIFORNIA:THETWOPARTYCONSENTSTATE........................................................................................5
THERIALTOSTUDY......................................................................................................................................6
THEACLU’SREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERAS.....................................................................................11
POLICEEXECUTIVERESEARCHFORUM’SSTUDY......................................................................................13
THEACLU&PRIVACYRIGHTS...................................................................................................................15
ACLURECOMMENDATIONS......................................................................................................................16
ARETHEREEXEMPTIONSTOWEARING
ABODYWORNCAMERA?..........................................................19
INSUMMARY............................................................................................................................................20
ENDNOTES................................................................................................................................................22
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BODYWORNCAMERAS
Technology is changing the role of law enforcement on a daily basis. The latest
technology is having a profound impact on policies and procedures, on weapons systems, and
even on how officers perform their daily duties. Yet, even with the latest technology available,
the actions and tactics of law enforcement are constantly being criticized by the media and
members of the public. Oftentimes juries return large verdicts against law enforcement
agencies. However, a new law enforcement tool may actually reduce exposure to litigation and
unwarranted citizens’ complaints. A new paradigm for law enforcement should be one of
accountability and transparency. One current way to assist law enforcement in being more
accountable is by requiring officers to use a Body Worn Camera ("Body Cam" or “BWC").
The implementation of Body Cams is currently causing a worldwide debate across groups such
as the Police Foundation, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the Police Executive
Research Forum and the American Civil Liberties Union.
This one aspect of law enforcement is poised to have huge ramifications for how law
enforcement interacts with its citizenry. Both law enforcement and local communities stand to
benefit from the deployment of BWCs.
There is no doubt that policies dealing with BWCs will become living and breathing
documents that will evolve as the boundaries of this new technology are pushed.
News media are replete with stories, almost on a daily basis, regarding law enforcement
agencies across the world that now require an officer to use a BWC. Once again, California
leads the way in deploying this new technology to help combat crime and reduce the exposure
to litigation.
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The City of Rialto, located in the Inland Empire area of Southern California, was the
first known police department to conduct a thorough study on the effects of using BWCs. The
Rialto Study
2
is cited across the world in arguments that support law enforcement adopting the
new technology. The Los Angeles Police Department, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department, and the Minneapolis Police Department, as many agencies, announced that they
too will begin to test the BWCs as part of patrol operations.
3
In August, 2013 Federal Judge Shira Scheindlin
ruled that New York Police Department’s stop-and-frisk
program was unconstitutional, yet she recommended the
possible use of BWCs on a limited basis.
4
“While the logistical difficulties of using body-
worn cameras will be greater in a larger police force, the
potential for avoiding constitutional violations will be
greater as well,” Scheindlin wrote.
Although the Second Circuit stayed Scheindlin’s order,
5
the trend to deploy BWCs
continues to move forward and raises valid questions regarding the use of such equipment.
Primary issues include:
Who and what should be recorded?
When do officers hit “record”?
When do officers hit “stop”?
Are there any exemptions to recording?
How will video be stored?
Who can access the video?
When and how will videos be released to the public?
What privacy issues are involved?
Law enforcement agencies around the world are now delving into using BWCs. The
decision to implement the use of body cams is merely an extension of the use of dash-mounted
video cameras and audio recorders, both of which have been in use for years. The use of BWCs
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will prove to be of great value to those agencies who deploy the new technology. However, the
decision to deploy BWCs is not without controversy.
In the expectation that many agencies will determine that the deployment of BWCs is
the right thing to do, this article will review suggested policy language, citing to both a recent
PERF Conference and a recently released ACLU study on the use of BWCs.
CALIFORNIA:THETWOPARTYCONSENTSTATE
It is important to determine whether a particular state is a one-party consent state or a
two-party consent state. For example, in a two-party consent state, such as the State of
California, when a person records the audio of a conversation, all parties involved in the
conversation must consent. Failure to gain consent from all parties involved in the conversation
may be a crime.
For example, California Penal Code
Section 632 makes it illegal for a person to record
a confidential communication without the consent
of all parties to that communication. However,
California Penal Code section 633, has an express
exemption for law enforcement. Section 633
clarifies the exception by emphasizing that
Section 632 does not prohibit any police officer
from overhearing or recording any communication that they could lawfully overhear or record.
In other words, if an officer is legally allowed to be where they are, there is no state law
that prohibits the officer from recording their interaction(s). This is supported by caselaw that
explains a person has no expectation of privacy when they are engaged in an interaction with
police (i.e., no expectation of privacy in the back of a police car, in jail, etc.). See People v.
Lucero, 190 Cal. App. 3d 1065 (1987) (use of a hidden recording device in police car does not
violate the Sixth Amendment and a criminal suspect in a police car does not have the
reasonable expectation of privacy that is required to invoke constitutional protection).
What if an officer is inside someone’s home? The answer should be the same. If the
officer lawfully enters a home because of a warrant, consent, or exigent circumstances, then
persons inside the home have no expectation of privacy. Therefore, no state law or
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constitutional provision exists that prohibits audio recording. While there does not appear to be
any case that specifically addresses Federal Constitutional privacy concerns with a camera worn
by a police officer, the Ninth Circuit has held, "Video surveillance does not in itself violate a
reasonable expectation of privacy. Videotaping of suspects in public places, such as banks, does
not violate the Fourth Amendment; the police may record what they normally may view with
the naked eye." United States v. Taketa, 923 F.2d 665 (9th Cir. 1991).
The cases where courts have found a constitutional violation when police videotape
usually involve circumstances when an officer uses a hidden camera or a home is monitored 24
hours per day with surveillance equipment. See United States v. Cuevas-Sanchez, 821 F.2d 248,
251 (5th Cir. 1987) (“the installation of a surveillance camera on a power pole to videotape
activities in a suspect's backyard constitutes a 'search' within the meaning of the Fourth
Amendment” and “raises the spectre of the Orwellian state.”). A person would not have the
same expectation of privacy if in the presence of an officer, nor would a recording be as
intrusive.
THERIALTOSTUDY
Although law enforcement has been recording citizens for years with audio recorders
and dash-mounted video cameras, the use of Body Cams is relatively new for law enforcement.
The first "true" study on the use of BWCs was conducted in Southern California by the City of
Rialto Police Department. The research was conducted by Rialto’s Police Chief Tony Farrar
during his studies at Cambridge University in the United Kingdom. Farrar’s findings are
documented in his graduate thesis: The Inescapable Panopticonic Gaze: The Effect of Body-
Worn Cameras On Police Use-Of-Force.
The study analyzed the use of Body Cams during the officers’
shifts. Two study groups were created. The first group, named
Experimental-Shifts, required each officer to wear a high definition
Body Cam during his/her shift. The Body Camera recorded all of the
officer’s interactions with the public. The second group, named
Control-Shifts, consisted of officers that were instructed not to use
body cameras during their shifts. Integrity of assignment was
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measured by the number of footage-hours against the assigned shifts as well as dip-sampling
dates of footage and ascertaining that officers wore cameras as assigned.
Shifts were randomly allocated to treatment and control conditions, using the
Cambridge Randomizer, on a weekly basis. As most law enforcement chief executives now
know, the major findings of the Rialto Study are as follows:
Use of BWCs reduced use-of-force incidents by 59 percent
Use of BWCs reduced citizens’ complaints by 87.5 percent
These results are now being used by law enforcement agencies across the world to
support the use of BWCs. The background of the study is discussed more thoroughly below.
The Rialto Police Department is a mid-sized police department that has jurisdiction over
28.5 square miles and services a population of 100,000 residents. The department employs 115
sworn police officers and 42 non-sworn personnel who deal with approximately 3,000 property
crimes and 500 violent crimes per year. In 2009-2011, the department dealt with 6 to 7
homicides per year, which is nearly 50 percent higher than the national rate.
The City of Rialto collaborated with TASER International, Inc. to provide Rialto’s front
line officers with high definition Body Cams. The cameras captured video evidence from the
officers’ perspectives. The BWCs weighed 108 grams and were small enough to place on an
officer's shirt pocket, hat, collar, shoulder, or a specially designed camera mounted to
sunglasses manufactured by Oakley, Inc. The units were water resistant, the videos were in full
color, and the battery life provided for 12 hours of recording— ideal for the shift patterns of the
Rialto Police Department.
All data from the body cameras was collated using a web-based computerized video
management system developed by EVIDENCE.com. The software tracked and inventoried all
evidence captured by the body cams. The system automatically uploaded all of the officers'
videos at the end of their shifts and a research team was granted full access to the data.
During the experimental period, a total of 25 incidents of police uses-of-force were
recorded by Rialto Police Department, of which 17 occurred during control shifts and 8 during
experimental shifts. These represent a mean rate of 0.78 and 0.33 incidents per 1,000 police
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interactions with the public, respectively. Based on these figures, the model used by Rialto
suggests a significant treatment effect on use-of-force. Shifts without cameras were twice as
likely to experience incidents of use-of-force as shifts with cameras.
The City also detected large before-and-after reductions in the prevalence of use-of-
force incidents: A 64.28 percent reduction from 2009, 61.53 percent from 2010, and 58.33
percent from 2011. The City found that the rate of use-of-force incidents per 1,000 contacts was
reduced by 2.5 times in comparison to 12 months prior to the experimental period. Rialto
noticed a sizable reduction in the number of citizens’ complaints against its officers as well.
The City documented an overall reduction in terms of citizens’ complaints. One year
prior to the study, citizens filed 24 complaints. During the study, citizens only filed 3
complaints. This broke down to 0.70 complaints per 1,000 interactions compared to .069 per
1,000 interactions. The raw year-to-year reductions suggests 91.66% fewer cases compared to
2009, 94.11 percent compared to 2010, and 89.28 percent compared to 2011. The outcome of
the Rialto Study documents more than a 50 percent reduction in the total number of incidents of
use-of-force compared to control conditions and over 60 percent compared to any of the three
years prior to the study. The City also observed nearly 10 times as many citizens’ complaints
one year prior to the study compared to any of the three years prior to the experiment.
Therefore, the Rialto Study provides law enforcement agencies with a methodology to
substantially reduce any sort of force response.
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
2009 2010 2011
UseofForceDown59%
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The Rialto Study concludes that "if one is not interested in the causal mechanism behind
a 90 percent reduction in citizens’ complaints and 59 percent reduction in any form of official
use-of-force, this behavioral modification is of real practical significance to the police,
especially given the cost-to-benefit ratios [citation omitted]. We therefore envisage that body-
worn cameras will dramatically change police-public encounters.”
The Rialto Study states that one impetus to conduct this study was to save money on
litigation costs and the expenses associated with incidents involving use-of-force and citizens’
complaints. Both justified and frivolous complaints against the police cost a great deal of
money in terms of both jury verdicts and out-of-court settlements. The City of Rialto
recognized that investigating these incidents was also resource-intensive, not to mention the
social and moral costs involved in such use-of-force incidents.
The Rialto Study cited to various statistics to support its claim that the BWCs would
reduce litigation costs. The study points to a report that the “UK Metropolitan Police have spent
£9M in six years in compensation to settle 915 complaints over police actions (BBC, 11 May
2012) – or about £10,000 per complaint. In Minneapolis, complaints investigated by the
Internal Affairs Division cost an average of $6,278; in Berkeley, California, about $8,571 per
case; and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, roughly $872 per case (Minneapolis Civilian Review
Authority 1997; Walker, Archbold and Herbst 2002). Unadjusted for inflation, according to the
study, these sums are still quite substantial, not the least being when they are substantiated and
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
2009 2010
Citizens'ComplaintsDown87.5%
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suggest unnecessary or excessive use of police power. To these sums, one should also add
oversight costs, which at least according to some estimates from nine jurisdictions (Finn 2001)
mount to $1,908 for each complaint (filed and investigated). Very crudely, and disregarding
accounting mistakes, this suggests to us that the direct costs of citizens’ complaints is roughly
in the area of $20,000 per complaint.”
Based upon the above statistics, the City believes it saved direct costs of 21 complaints
(the difference between before and after the experiment), or about $400,000. To put these
figures in perspective, the total cost for Rialto Police Department to purchase the body cameras
was a little over $90,000. These direct costs included 70 complete video camera units and
mounts (including spares), charging/ docking stations, the video management and data upload
and tracking system, along with training for the trainers, technicians, and each officer. This
suggests that the direct benefit to cost ratio is approximately $4 saved for every $1 spent on the
cameras. Furthermore, if citizens’ complaints are reliable proxies of use-of-force incidents, then
a high number of complaints can also be a proxy of potential hazards to the already delicate
relations between the police and the community served.
According to the Rialto Study, “there are hidden social and ethical costs to the
inescapable panopticonic gaze itself. If BWCs become common, it means more electronic
surveillance, more digitized tagging of individuals, and arguably more challenges to privacy
rights. This was certainly the argument against CCTV, as there are clear ethical considerations
to having a data storage policy that routinely collects data on citizens in the public domain
[citations omitted].”
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The Rialto Study makes sure to distinguish Closed Circuit Television (“CCTV”) from
the use of BWCs. But the moral argument against CCTV is not in the same scope and
magnitude when it comes to BWCs. CCTV surveillance captures the daily and routine behavior
of citizens, whose consent is not obtained prior to the recording. This indeed can be a source of
concern, even though the public safety benefits may overshadow the potential compromise of
human rights. But police-public encounters are often involuntary, especially when considering
that a substantial proportion of a police officer’s interactions are with suspects and/or offenders.
By definition, a suspect’s rights are debilitated, insomuch as a suspect does not have the right
not to be videotaped when under investigation in police stations. Likewise, victims and
witnesses should expect that their conversations with police officers are official and recordable
communications.
The Rialto Study recognized there are situations in which police interactions should not
necessarily be videotaped (e.g. interactions with minors, sexually-based offenses, and informal
conversations with officers). However, the Rialto Study recognized an overall benefit to
recording police interactions with the public that justifies the perceived moral costs.
THEACLU’SREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERAS
The American Civil Liberties Union released its white paper on the use of BWCs in
October 2013. In the report entitled Police Body-Mounted Cameras: With Right Policies in
Place, a Win For All
6
, the ACLU takes the position that while it does not like the increased use
of video cameras to keep tabs on citizens, it does recognize that such video cameras can result
in the reduction of use-of-force incidents. Therefore, the cameras will assist in holding law
enforcement more accountable to the community.
The ACLU and law enforcement both recognize that the use of BWCs have both
positive and negative aspects. Therefore, the proper policies and training on the use of BWCs
will have to be an important component in the deployment of the new technology. As stated by
the ACLU, “[t]he challenge of on-officer cameras is the tension between their potential to
invade privacy and their strong benefit in promoting police accountability. Overall, we think
they can be a win-win—but only if they are deployed within a framework of strong policies to
ensure they protect the public without becoming yet another system for routine surveillance of
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the public, and maintain public confidence in the integrity of those privacy protections. Without
such a framework, their accountability benefits would not exceed their privacy risks."
The ACLU lists several concerns over the use of BWCs including the Control of
Recording. The ACLU is troubled by the ability of officers to determine what they record.
“[P]olicies and technology must be designed to ensure that police cannot edit on the fly (i.e.,
choose which encounters to record with limitless discretion). If police are free to turn the
cameras on and off as they please, the cameras' role in providing a check and balance against
police power will shrink and they will no longer become a net benefit."
The ACLU opines that
officers should have the videos
recording continuously for the
duration of an officer's shift.
Such a policy, in their opinion,
would ensure that an officer
would not avoid recording an
event that could be troubling for
an officer. "If the cameras do not
record continuously, that would
place them under officer control, which would create the danger that they could be manipulated
by some officers, undermining their core purpose of detecting police misconduct."
Requiring an officer to keep the video on for the duration of the shift, however, is not
practicable. The officers also have privacy issues, such as using the restroom facilities, being
able to talk in their patrol car with their partner about station issues and their personal lives.
There obviously has to be a balance struck.
Even the ACLU recognizes that there are problems with requiring the officers to keep
the videos on the entire shift.
"The balance that needs to be struck is to ensure that officers can't manipulate
the video record, while also ensuring that officers are not subjected to a
relentless regime of surveillance without any opportunity for shelter from
constant monitoring."
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POLICEEXECUTIVERESEARCHFORUM’SSTUDY
In 2013, the Police Executive Research Forum ("PERF") conducted a survey among
departments regarding the use of BWCs. The purpose of the survey was to measure police
department usage of body cameras across the country and identify the major issues associated
with such use. Out of the 500 agencies that received survey invitations, only 254 agencies
responded—a 50 percent response rate. The survey provided the following results:
Of the 254 responding
agencies, 75 percent do not
currently use BWCs. Of the
254 responding agencies, only
63 agencies (25 percent)
currently use body-worn
cameras. Nearly one-third of
agencies that use BWCs do not
possess written policies.
Not surprisingly,
according to the survey results,
the primary reason why
departments obtain body
cameras for agency personnel is: "to provide accurate documentation of encounters."
PERF intends to develop a model policy regarding the use of BWCs. During the PERF
Conference on the use of such cameras, held on Sept 11, 2013, in Washington D.C., both the
positive and negative aspects of the BWCs were discussed.
It is interesting to note that there were police departments represented from around the
world at the PERF Conference. Many agencies present were already using BWCs. Based on
some questions asked, it was apparent that many agencies did not have tailored policies and
many did not have any policies at all to regulate the use of BWCs. Some of the agencies
seemed to have a policy of "Record Everything, All The Time". Law Enforcement Agencies,
therefore, have a unique opportunity to develop cutting-edge policies that can be the model for
other agencies.
25%
75%
UseofBodyWornCameras
AgenciesUsingBCWs AgenciesNotUsingBWCs
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The most obvious benefit from wearing BWCs is that law enforcement will be seen as
being more transparent and holding itself out as more accountable. The use of BWCs will also
assist in exonerating officers who are targets of citizens’ complaints and, hopefully, will reduce
the number of lawsuits against a department.
The use of BWCs will assist law enforcement managers with identifying and correcting
systemic problems or individual officer issues. Supervisors, who view the videos as part of their
duties, will be able to use the videos as a teaching tool to train officers on proper strategies and
techniques.
Many agencies are touting the use of BWCs for making them more efficient in crime
solving. The video will be able to capture valuable evidence for investigations and trials. The
video footage will also provide more accurate documentation of scenes, interviews, and
encounters between police and citizens.
While there are certainly benefits to be achieved from the use of BWCs, there are issues
that need to be addressed by a department before deploying its officers equipped with such
cameras. For example, a department has to ensure that its officers "buy in" to the program,
which means discussions must be held with the police union before BWCs are instituted.
Otherwise, needless litigation and a "Big Brother” mentality will become issues.
The challenge will be to avoid the appearance of routinely second guessing actions of
personnel, or “head-hunting” of particular officers by supervisors/management. The video itself
will not tell the “whole story” of what took place, just a snippet of what occurred. There must
still be an investigation as to what the officer believed and what other facts surround an
incident. Wholesale reliance on a video will not do justice to anyone without a full
investigation.
The issue of officer buy-in was recently reported in an article in the Las Vegas Sun,
regarding Las Vegas Metro Police Department buying and deploying BWCs.
7
"Four hundred Metro Police officers soon will add an extra gadget to their ensemble: on-body
cameras, a long-discussed endeavor department leaders call the wave of the future. A pilot
program based in two area commands, one in the northeast valley and another in West Las
Vegas, will launch by February, department officials said. The initiative, however, comes with
a compromise meant to appease the police union: It's a voluntary program, except for officers
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|15
hired after July 11. They will be required to wear the cameras. ‘I don't want to go to court,’
Sheriff Doug Gillespie said, explaining the rationale behind the compromise.”
Of course, the biggest issue to be addressed before body cameras are deployed is one of
privacy. The issue is twofold:
Should citizens have an expectation of privacy?
Should officers have an expectation of privacy?
THEACLU&PRIVACYRIGHTS
The ACLU is particularly concerned over privacy rights. They fear that the use of body
cameras may result in instances of entirely innocent behavior (on the part of both officers and
the public) being recorded, with significant privacy implications. In particular, the most
troubling aspect of recording will occur when camera-equipped officers are inside people's
homes, whenever police enter — including in instances of consensual entry (e.g., responding to
a burglary call, voluntarily participating in an investigation) and such things as domestic
violence calls.
Civil rights groups are concerned that videos from BWCs,
like videos from currently used dash-mounted cameras, may be
publicly released for no important public reason, and instead serve
only to embarrass individuals. Obviously, the public has seen
recent examples of this, including DUI stops of celebrities and
ordinary individuals whose troubled and/or intoxicated behavior
have been widely circulated and now immortalized online. Civil
rights groups believe the potential for embarrassing and titillating
releases of video is significantly increased by the use of BWCs.
Department Body Worn Camera policies, therefore, become vital to ensure that any
deployment of the cameras be accompanied by strong privacy policies so that the benefits of the
technology are not outweighed by any invasions of privacy.
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|16
ACLURECOMMENDATIONS
The ACLU advocates that most privacy protections will have to come from restrictions
on subsequent retention and use of the recordings. The ACLU recommends the following
policies to assist a department in protecting privacy rights:
“(1) Recording should be limited to uniformed officers and marked vehicles, so people
know what to expect. An exception should be made for SWAT raids and similar
planned uses of force when they involve non-uniformed officers.
(2) Officers should be required, wherever practicable, to notify people that they are
being recorded (similar to existing law for dash cams in some states). One possibility
departments might consider is for officers to wear an easily visible pin or sticker saying
"lapel camera in operation" or words to that effect.
(3) Although if the preceding policies are properly followed it should not be possible
(sic), it is especially important that the cameras not be used to surreptitiously gather
intelligence information based on First Amendment protected speech, associations, or
religion.
(4) Because of the uniquely intrusive nature of police recordings made inside private
homes, officers should be required to be especially sure to provide clear notice of a
camera when entering a home, except in circumstances such as an emergency or a raid.
Departments might also consider a policy under which officers ask residents whether
they wish for a camera to be turned off before they enter a home in non-exigent
circumstances. (Citizen requests for cameras to be turned off should themselves be
recorded to document such requests.) Cameras should never be turned off in SWAT
raids and similar police actions.”
The ACLU recommends the following policy language regarding document retention
issues:
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“Data should be retained no longer than necessary for the purpose for which it was
collected. For the vast majority of police encounters with the public, there is no reason
to preserve video evidence, and those recordings therefore should be deleted relatively
quickly.
Retention periods should be measured in weeks, not years, and video should be deleted
after that period unless a recording has been flagged. Once a recording has been flagged,
it would then switch to a longer retention schedule (need to follow state law
requirements).
These policies should be posted online on the department's website, so that people who
have encounters with police know how long they have to file a complaint or request
access to footage.
Flagging should occur automatically for any incident:
involving a use-of-force;
that leads to detention or arrest; or
where either a formal or informal complaint has been registered.
Any subject of a recording should be able to flag a recording, even if not filing a
complaint or opening an investigation.
Police department personnel (including internal affairs investigators and supervisors)
and third parties should also be able to flag an incident if they have some basis to
believe police misconduct has occurred or have reasonable suspicion that the video
contains evidence of a crime. We do not want the police or gadflies to be able to
routinely flag all recordings in order to circumvent the retention limit.
If any useful evidence is obtained during an authorized use of a recording, the recording
would then be retained in the same manner as any other evidence gathered during an
investigation.
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Back-end systems to manage video data must be configured to retain the data, delete it
after the retention period expires, prevent deletion by individual officers, and provide an
unimpeachable audit trail to protect chain of custody, just as with any evidence.”
The ACLU is very concerned with the public release of camera footage. The ACLU
wants
law enforcement to be able to balance the need for oversight and accountability with the need to
maintain privacy of individuals. To that end, the ACLU has provided the suggested policy
language:
“Public disclosure of any recording should be allowed with the
consent of the subjects, as discussed above.
Redaction of video records should be used when feasible – blurring or blacking out of
portions of video and/or distortion of audio to obscure the identity of subjects. If
recordings are redacted, they should be disclosable.
Unredacted, unflagged recordings should not be publicly disclosed
without consent of the subject. These are recordings where there is no indication of
police misconduct or evidence of a crime, so the public oversight value is low. States
may need to examine how such a policy interacts with their state open records laws.
Flagged recordings are those for which there is the highest likelihood of misconduct,
and thus the ones where public oversight is most needed. Redaction of disclosed
recordings is preferred, but when that is not feasible, unredacted flagged recordings
should be publicly disclosable, because in such cases the need for oversight outweighs
the privacy interests at stake.”
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|19
ARETHEREEXEMPTIONSTOWEARINGABODYWORNCAMERA?
There is little debate that all patrol officers should be issued BWCs. Patrol officers have
the most contact with members of the community and, therefore, would receive the most
benefit of having a Body Worn Camera to record their interactions, such as traffic stops and
other encounters that could result in a use of force situation or potential citizen complaint. It is
in these daily citizen encounters where the BWCs will justify their costs.
There is justified debate as to whether some units, other than patrol, should be exempted
from wearing BWCs. Do detectives need to wear BWCs as they conduct their day to day
activities? The reality is that they do not need to wear BWCs, absent extenuating
circumstances, such as making an arrest.
The issue of whether tactical teams and patrol dog teams should deploy with BWCs is
more problematic. While agencies may feel that all law enforcement units should deploy with
BWCs, care must be taken to determine whether such a mandate is feasible or even appropriate.
Issues such as intelligence gathering and tactics being compromised must be discussed before
determining whether BWCs should be worn by specialty units.
It might be impracticable for tactical team snipers to deploy with BWCs as they may be
too far away for the cameras to be used and the cameras might even interfere with the abilities
of the snipers to perform their duties. Likewise, it might be more advantageous for members of
the entry team to deploy with audio recorders as opposed to BWCs. The audio recorders will
record the knock and notice announcements and record the conversations that might take place
inside a structure, without compromising tactics.
Caution must also be used when determining whether police service dog teams should
deploy with BWCs. Testing should be conducted to ensure that the cameras do not interfere
with the movements of the canine handler. Likewise, a balancing of interests must be engaged
in before canine handlers deploy with a Body Worn Camera. If intelligence gathering
techniques and tactics will be compromised by deploying a Body Worn Camera on a canine
search, then perhaps the camera should not be deployed.
The deployment of BWCs on specialty units needs to be thoroughly vetted before such
use occurs. Much of what occurs in law enforcement can be dangerous and visceral and
members of the community may not appreciate and/or understand what is being shown on
camera.
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|20
INSUMMARY
The City of Los Angeles, through private donations, is going to equip all of its officers
with BWCs. ”At the end of the day, there’s going to be lives saved, a whole lot of money saved,
and a whole lot of legal hours saved,” according to Steve Soboroff, president of the Los
Angeles Police Commission.
8
Surprisingly, the ACLU and PERF recommendations do not differ as much as one
might expect. Both offer solid suggestions on building a workable BWC policy.
The use of BWCs would be an excellent tool to help modify the behavior of both the
police and members of the community. In the event of a use of force incident, supervisors
would be able to view what happened and determine whether any alleged misconduct occurred.
Some of the issues to be addressed
include how will the video data be stored?
Who will have access to the video data?
And how often will the video data be
reviewed to assess compliance with
department policies and procedures? How
will a state’s Public Record Act request be
handled, and who will make the final
determination on whether a video should be
released? There is also a legitimate concern
over the costs associated with purchasing
BWCs and the attendant costs associated with storing the collected data. Once these concerns
are addressed and BWCs become the norm, additional issues may emerge, such as the
deployment of video devices for specific tasks. For example, the use with tactical and canine
teams.
There is a legitimate concern that local prosecutors will demand that all criminal cases
filed have an accompanying video along with the other hard evidence. There will have to be
discussions with the prosecutors to determine what happens if a video does not exist for
whatever reason. Likewise, there needs to be a discussion on whether officers need to write
reports on encounters where a video is involved or just document that a video exists of the
incident.
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|21
There is no doubt the current trend in law enforcement is to deploy BWCs to help
combat crime, to reduce citizens’ complaints and to reduce use of force situations. The policies
that will determine the use of the BWCs have to be tailored to meet the needs of a particular
locale. While the cameras are necessary for the patrol setting, care must be taken in determining
whether BWCs are appropriate for all law enforcement functions. “It’s a very different world in
policing small towns versus areas with major drug gangs and crime problems,” said John
Donohue, a Stanford Law School Professor.
9
With this is mind, the Los Angeles Police
Department is beginning to deploy body cameras with its officers.
Based on evidence collected in the Rialto Study, the findings suggest that BWCs
significantly reduce the prevalence of use-of-force by the police as well as citizens’ complaints
against the police. The use of the cameras has demonstrated the impact on the behavior of
officers and citizens alike through the experience of being observed. This results in socially-
desirable outcomes, most notably, the reduction in the use-of-force by police officers in police-
public encounters. These reasons alone should compel the deployment of BWCs.
Technology is certainly impacting law enforcement in ways never thought possible just
a few years ago. The use of BWCs is an opportunity to move forward with technology, in a
reasonable expectation that law enforcement will actually benefit from the use of BWCs.
The major impediment to implementing BWCs, as previously discussed, is the issue of
privacy. However, with proper training and the proper policies in place, this issue is not
insurmountable. Law enforcement has successfully implemented the use of audio recordings
and dash-mounted video systems for the past several years. The use of BWCs, therefore, should
not be difficult to implement.
In the long run, the use of BWCs will prove to be a valuable tool for both law
enforcement and the local community. However, it is just one tool among many and should not
be thought to be the ultimate factor in judging the actions of officers. BWCs only provide one
view of an incident. An officer will still have to explain his/her actions and then a determination
must be made whether the ultimate decision made was reasonable under all of the
circumstances presented to the officer.
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|22
ENDNOTES

1
EugeneP.Ramirez,afoundingmemberofthefirm,graduatedfromWhittierCollegeSchoolofLaw(J.D.,1987),
wherehewasNotes&CommentsEditoroftheLawReview,amemberoftheMootCourtHonorsBoardand
PresidentoftheStudentBarAssociation.AtWhittier,hereceivedanaward
astheBestOralAdvocateandthe
OutstandingMootCourtGraduateAward.HereceivedhisundergraduatedegreeinPoliticalSciencefrom
CaliforniaStateUniversity,LongBeach(B.A.,1983),whereheminoredinCriminalJustice&PublicPolicy.
Beforejoiningthefirm,Mr.RamirezworkedasaDeputyDistrictAttorneyfor
theLosAngelesCountyDistrict
Attorney'sOffice,whereheconductednumerousmisdemeanorandfelonyjurytrials,includingmurdertrials.He
hasalsoworkedasareservepoliceofficerfortheWhittierPoliceDepartmentandtheMontereyParkPolice
Department.
Heservesasanadvisortoseveralpublicentitiesonthe
issuesofuseofforce,canineandSWATissuesand
policiesandprocedures.Hehasprovidedtrainingtothousandsofpoliceofficersandsupervisors,fromaround
thecountryandCanada,overthepast20years.
Mr.RamirezisaninstructoronliabilityissuesfortheLosAngelesCountySheriff’sDepartment’s
BasicSWAT
School.HeisalsoaninstructorfortheCaliforniaAssociationofTacticalOfficers(CATO)andfortheNational
TacticalOfficers’Association(NTOA).HewasamemberoftheStateAttorneyGeneral’sBlueRibbonSWAT
CommitteeandhewasamemberofPOST’sExecutiveAdvisoryCommitteeforSWATTeams.He
wasamember
oftheLAPDBoardofInquiry,whichexaminedLAPDSWAToperations.HeisanapprovedCaliforniaPOST
instructor.

Mr.RamirezwasprofiledintheApril2003,CaliforniaLawyerMagazine,forhisworkindefendinglaw
enforcement.Hewashonoredwiththe2004LifetimeAchievementAwardfromthe
AssociationofLosAngeles
DeputySheriffs(ALADS).Hehasbeennamedasa20052011SuperLawyerforSouthernCalifornia.Hewasalso
namedtothedistinguishedAmericanBoardofTrialAdvocates(ABOTA),in2005,anawardonlybestowedupon
proventrialattorneys.
HewasselectedastheLosAngeles
CountySheriff'sDepartment’sTrialLawyeroftheYearin1993and,2006,by
twodifferentSheriffs.Hewasselectedasthe2009AlumniAttorneyoftheYearforWhittierSchoolofLaw.He
hasbeenselectedtwiceasoneoftheTop25MunicipalAttorneysinCaliforniabytheDaily
Journal.
2
TonyFarrar,TheInescapablePanopticonicGaze;TheEffectofBodyWornCamerasonPoliceUseofForce,CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY(2013).ChiefFarrarpreparedamorethoroughreportonhisstudyentitled,“VideoRecordingsofPolice‐Citizen
EncountersbyOfficersWearingBodyWordVideoCameras:LeadingaRandomizedControlTrial”(January2013)
(unpublishedthesissubmittedinpartfulfilmentoftherequirementfortheMastersDegreeinAppliedCriminologyand
PoliceManagement,
FitzwilliamCollege)(onfilewithSupervisor,Dr.BarakAriel,FitzwilliamCollege).
4
See,e.g.,JonCollins,Bodycameraonpoliceofficers?InBurnsville,it'soldnews,MINNESOTAPUBLICRADIO(October22,2013),
availableathttp://minnesota.publicradio.org/
display/web/2013/10/22/news/burnsvillepolicebodycameras;IanLovett,In
California,aChampionforPoliceCameras,NEWYORKTIMES(August21,2013),availableathttp://
www.nytimes.com/2013/08/22/us/incaliforniaachampionforpolicecameras.html?_r=0(notinguseofbodycamerasin
Albuquerque,FortWorthandOakland);JoelRubin,DodgersDonatetoLAPDforBodyCameras,P
OLICEONE.COM(October22,
2013),availableathttp://www.policeone.com/Grants/articles/6491445DodgersdonatetoLAPDforbodycameras/
(originallypublishedinLATimes);Metro,PoliceUnionReachAgreementonBodyCameras,KLASC
HANNEL8NEWS(September
23,2013),availableathttp://www.8newsnow.com/story/23499683/debategrowingovermorecopstax(notinguseof
bodycamerasinLasVegas);ArtMarroquin,Anaheim,Fullertonpolicegaugingvalueofcliponcameras,O
RANGECOUNTY
REGISTER(September26,2013),availableathttp://www.ocregister.com/articles/officers528151‐policecameras.html..
AREPORTONBODYWORNCAMERASBYEUGENEP.RAMIREZ|23

5
Floydv.CityofNewYork,08CIV.1034SAS,2013WL4046217(S.D.N.Y. Aug.12,2013),appealdismissed(Sept.25,2013).See
alsoBarryPaddock,NYPDcopsinstopand‐friskiestprecinctstowearbodycamsafterjudge’sruling,NEWYORKDAILYNEWS
(August12,2013),availableathttp://www.nydailynews.com/newyork/nypdcopswearbody‐camsarticle1.1425121.See
alsoColleenLong,NYPDorderedtostartusingofficerworncameras,THEASSOCIATEDPRESS(August14,2013),availableat
http://www.policeone.com/
policeproducts/bodycameras/articles/6386513NYPDorderedtostartusingofficerworn
cameras/.
6
Ligonv.CityofNewYork,133123,2013WL5835441(2dCir.Oct.31,2013)supersededinpartsubnom.Inre
ReassignmentofCases,133123,2013WL5998139(2dCir.Nov.13,2013).
7
JackieValley,Metrotooutfitofficerswithcamerasinpilotprogrambeginningin2014,LASVEGASSUN(October13,2013),
availableathttp://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2013/oct/13/metrooutfitofficerscameraspilotprogrambeginn/.
8
HamedAleazlz,LAPDBodyCamerasCouldBeBlueprintforOtherCities,DAILYJOURNAL,(Novembe r13,2013)
9
Id.Note:PhotographsusedwithpermissionfromTaser,Inc.