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A Tale of Two Body Camera Videos

A police body camera is shown
When the police are given the discretion to publicly release favorable body camera footage but withhold negative footage, police body cameras become nothing more than a police propaganda tool.
A police body camera is shown
Chad Marlow,
Senior Policy Counsel,
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December 23, 2020

Over the past month, two high-profile incidents reaffirmed why police body cameras cannot serve as a police transparency and accountability tool as long as state law empowers the police to determine what footage the public gets to see. As we have said and again, when the police are given the discretion to publicly release favorable body camera footage but withhold negative footage, police body cameras become nothing more than a police propaganda tool.

The first such incident occurred on Nov. 19 in Omaha, Nebraska, where Kenneth Jones, a 35-year-old Black man, was pulled from the back seat of a car and killed by white police officers during a traffic stop. Despite having body camera footage of the incident, and immediate calls for transparency, the Omaha Police Department has refused to release the footage despite Nebraska鈥檚 strong tradition of open government. This decision, quite understandably, the public. Omaha Deputy City Attorney Bernard in den Bosch, while that 鈥渋n the State of Nebraska, body cam videos are probably public records鈥 nevertheless stated that 鈥渨e have exercised our right to use the exception in the public records act to withhold them from public dissemination.鈥

Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer , saying that 鈥淚 want to release the video鈥 but then claiming he could not because 鈥渢he video is the most inflammatory piece鈥 of evidence, and that 鈥渁rguably, if you are going to taint the jury pool, it would be with that piece of evidence.鈥 The Omaha Police Department even went a step further, suggesting that Nebraska state law prohibits them from releasing the footage until the conclusion of any grand jury work related to the recorded incident.

The chief鈥檚 claims are odd and suspicious for three reasons. First, when privately recorded videos of police conduct have been publicly released, they have had shockingly little impact on jury pools. Just ask the families of in Staten Island, New York or in Mesa, Arizona, where despite the release of graphic videos of their family members鈥 murders, the offending officers avoided any criminal liability. Second, the chief鈥檚 claim that state law prohibits him from releasing the footage is without merit. Even the local county prosecutor鈥檚 office told News Channel Nebraska that 鈥渘othing in the [state] grand jury law prohibits any police video from being released now.鈥 Third, despite the chief鈥檚 claim that he was legally prohibited from releasing the body camera footage, he and his own police department went ahead and released several still images from the video 鈥 undermining all his previous claims.

All in all, the tangled web of strained and dubious claims by the Omaha Police Department are strongly indicative of someone trying to hide the truth; in this case, an unfavorable truth contained on body camera footage. But because Nebraska state law does not create an affirmative obligation to release police use-of-force body camera videos within a short time after an incident, the public has not seen the footage to date.

Contrast that with the second incident, which occurred just over two weeks later, on Dec. 7, in Tallahassee, Florida. In that case, the Florida State Police raided the home of former Florida Department of Health data scientist Rebekah Jones, who has she was fired from her job for refusing to manipulate COVID data. Following the raid, Jones that the state police 鈥減ointed a gun in my face. They pointed guns at my kids.鈥 The tweet, which included a privately recorded video of the police entering Jones鈥 home, was by the local press.

In that case, like the case in Omaha, the police were wearing body cameras. Similarly as well, Florida's body camera law, like that in Nebraska, does not require the immediate release of body camera videos that contain police uses of force, like entering a person鈥檚 home with guns drawn. However, in the Florida case, police body camera footage appears to show the state police acting in a more restrained manner than Jones was alleging. As a result, in what CNN properly noted to be a 鈥渞are move鈥, the state police publicly, and they did it quickly. Transparency prevailed, but only because it favored the police.

This double standard plays out in states like Nebraska, Florida, and many others where laws allow the police to be the sole or initial arbiter of what body camera footage the public gets to see. When body camera footage is negative, the police use bogus arguments to either withhold it or to justify selectively releasing portions of the footage to foster the story they are trying to tell. However, when body camera footage is favorable, the police tend to release the video with lightning speed. That is how a propaganda tool operates.

If police body cameras are ever to become a real tool for promoting police transparency and accountability, release of footage that captures uses of force or alleged police misconduct should be quick and automatic. Further, as the 老澳门开奖结果鈥檚 model state body camera legislation states, 鈥渨here a subject of the video footage is recorded being killed, shot by a firearm, or grievously injured, [release of the footage] shall be prioritized and the requested video footage shall be provided as expeditiously as possible, but in no circumstances later than five (5) days following receipt of the request.鈥 States that do otherwise, either by leaving the release of critical footage to law enforcement discretion or by erecting laborious and costly legal hurdles to accessing important footage, should drop the ruse that they care about police transparency or the safety of their Black and Brown constituents who are so frequently the targets of police misconduct.

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