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Body cameras: Can they reduce confrontations with police?

Widespread protests in the U.S. over several controversial police shootings have refocused attention on body-mounted cameras and whether they might prevent such incidents. A number of forces in the U.S., Canada and the U.K. already use the technology, but its still an open question whether it can truly change how police and the public interact.

Studies suggest body cameras can reduce use of force and complaints, but evidence not definitive

The New York Police Department is one of several forces in the U.S., Canada and the U.K. experimenting with body cameras, pictured on an officer's uniform above. Police in Calgary, Vancouver and Toronto have all said they will adopt or try out the technology. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)

Widespread protests in the U.S. over several police shootings have refocused attention on bodycameras and whether they might prevent such incidents.

A number of forces in the U.S., Canada and the U.K. already use the technology, but it's still an open question whether it can truly change how police and the public interact.

In the face of criticism of a grand jury decision not to indict New York police officer DanielPantaleofor the death of Eric Garner and with the shadow of the Ferguson riotsstilllooming, U.S. President Barack Obama pledged$75 million US for 50,000 bodycameras to be distributed to police departments around the country.

Garner died in July after a confrontation with police in which he was subdued by several officers andplaced in achokeholdbyPantaleo.The incident was video-recorded on a bystander's cellphoneas numerous police shootings and violent confrontations have been in recent years.

In thesmartphoneage, there hasbeen no shortage of controversial police incidents caught on video, yet they continue to happen most recently last Tuesday with the fatal police shooting ofRumainBrisbon, an unarmed black man, in Phoenix. So, will video recording the actions of police make any difference?

Some experts think so.

Greater chance of justice

PeterBibringof the American Civil Liberties Unionhas argued that the failure to indictPantaleois not a reason to abandon police bodycameras, which are usually worn on anofficer's vest, lapel or helmet or attached to glasses or headsets.

"Video evidenceprovides the public with crucial information about how police operate," he wrote in ablog poston the ACLU website. "It's in large part because of the video footage that the nation is so outraged at Garner's killing. We know what happened we may not have all the evidence the grand jury had, but we know a lot more than if no video existed."

Video might not resolve every dispute, it might not guarantee indictments or discipline in every case where they're deserved but the chances of justice without it seem much less.PeterBibring, American Civil Liberties Union

The ACLU hasendorsedthe use of bodycamerasas a means of promoting police accountability, as long as departments adopt clearpoliciesto protect privacy and limit how the recordings are used.

Video footage can help settle arguments over who did what and whenand frees juries and investigators from having to rely solely onpolice testimony, saysBibring,

"Video might not resolve every dispute, it might not guarantee indictments or discipline in every case where they're deserved but the chances of justice without it seem much less," he writes.

Feweruse-of-force events, complaints

There have been several studies that seem to indicate that when police use body camerasduring an encounter, it hasa "civilizing" effect on all parties.

A randomizedcontrolledtrial inRialto, Calif., which introduced body camerasfor its 50 officersin 2012 after several police misconduct scandals, found that in the 12months that body cameras were used, there was a 60 per cent drop in use-of-force incidents and an 88 per cent drop in citizen complaints about police behaviour. Studies in Phoenix and Mesa, Ariz.,had similar results.

All were based on a raw comparisonof numbers and provided no details of how police and citizens actually behaved during the encounters, said Michael D. White, a criminologist at Arizona State University who reviewed these trials and others for the U.S. Department of Justice.

"Youknow that there was this 60 per cent reduction in the use of force, but you don't really know why,"he said. "Was it driven by citizens beingmore compliant and co-operative? Was it driven bypolice officersbeingmorerespectful, which then changedthetone of the encounter?Wedon'tknow."

The reduction in complaints, for example, could be the result of people being intimidated by thepresence of cameras and deciding not to report an incidentwhen under other circumstances they would have. One of the reasons police departments like bodycameras is that they reduce frivolous complaints and cut down on litigation costs, but they may also dissuade legitimate complainants.

Cameras encourage by-the-book behaviour

The studies also found that officers who use bodycameras make more arrests and hand out more ticketslikelyout of a fear of being reprimanded by their bosses.

It could be that the body-worn camera is having the effect of reducing officer discretion, that is, officers are less likely to resolve things informally. Michael D. White, criminologist

"It could be that the body-worn camera is having the effect of reducing officer discretion, that is, officers are less likely to resolve things informally because they know they're wearing the camera and they know, 'Gee, if my supervisor reviews this, and he sees that Ihad the potential to make an arrest and Ididn't, that may come back to bite me in the butt,'" White said.

A protester sits in the road near Times Square while rallying against a grand jury's decision not to indict the New York police officer involved in the death of Eric Garner. (Jason DeCrow/Associated Press)
The Mesa studyfound that officers with body camerasconducted fewer stop-and-frisks, suggestingthe presence of a camera may have led them to "think more carefully about what constitutes reasonable suspicion,"according to Justin Ready and Jacob T.N.Young, the authors of the study, who described their findingsin Slate.

Based on sales figures from police camera vendors like Taser and Vievu, White estimates that about 5,000 U.S. policedepartments are currently using body cameras, but exactly when officersturn them on varies by department, some leave it to officers' discretion, others require cameras to be on in every encounter with citizens.

This has already led to problems in some jurisdictions.Police officers in Oakland, Calif., were the subject of numerous citizen complaints after they selectively turned their body camerason or off during the 2011 Occupy Oakland protests, and inAlbuquerque, N.M.,a police officer involved in a fatal shooting of a 19-year-old woman was fired for not turning on his lapel camera during the incident.

Video not always objective

Even whenbody cameras are on, they don't necessarily provide a foolproof, objective account of the event.

"People interpret what they see on video through their own experiences," Ready and Young, both assistant professors of criminology at Arizona State University, wrotein Slate.

"Different viewers may contextualize the event differentlyin terms of how it is framed in their mind, how they think it was precipitated and what they think happened in the 30 seconds before the camera started rolling."

Cameras can actually hinder some types of police work such as domestic violence calls, providing assistance to the injured or mentally ill and intervening in everyday disputes, they said.

A headshot of Sammy Yatim
Smartphones have made it easier to record police confrontations. The fatal police shooting of Toronto teenager Sammy Yatim on a streetcar was caught on video by a bystander. (Facebook/The Canadian Press)

"The device can be a physical reminder to crime victims that they are on camera at times when they are most vulnerable and in need of privacy," they write.

The ACLU, too, has raised concerns about the potential for invasions of privacy in certain situations such as home searches as well as about the long-term storage and use of the video police collect.

"It's vital that this technology not become a back door for any kind of systematic surveillance or tracking of the public," the ACLU said in a 2013 position paper.