How the NYPD defeated bodycams

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How the NYPD defeated bodycams

The torso of a police officer. He is wearing a bodycam. The bodycam's lens has been replaced by the glaring red eye of HAL9000 from Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey.'    Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg  CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en  --  Tony Webster, modified https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Minneapolis_Police_Officer_Body_Camera_%2848968390892%29.jpg  CC BY-SA 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/deed.en  ALT

Anything that can’t go on forever will eventually stop. When American patience for racial profiling in traffic stops reached a breaking point, cops rolled out dashcams. Dashcam footage went AWOL, or just recorded lots of racist, pretextual stops. Racial profiling continued.

Tasers and pepper spray were supposed to curb the undue use of force by giving cops an alternative to shooting dangerous-seeming people. Instead, we got cops who tasered and sprayed unarmed people and then shot them to pieces.

Next came bodycams: by indelibly recording cops’ interactions with the public, body-worn cameras were pitched as a way to bring accountability to American law-enforcement. Finally, police leadership would be able to sort officers’ claims from eyewitness accounts and figure out who was lying. Bad cops could be disciplined. Repeat offenders could be fired.

Police boosters insist that police violence and corruption are the result of “a few bad apples.” As the saying goes, “a few bad apples spoil the bushel.” If you think there are just a few bad cops on the force, then you should want to get rid of them before they wreck the whole institution. Bodycams could empirically identify the bad apples, right?

Well, hypothetically. But what if police leadership don’t want to get rid of the bad apples? What if the reason that dashcams, tasers, and pepper spray failed is that police leadership are fine with them? If that were the case, then bodycams would turn into just another expensive prop for an off-Broadway accountability theater.

What if?

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Police unions pushed for body cams as a “reform” to counter demands for more oversight and budget cuts. Now we have seen the result of those “reforms:” when police abuse their power the body cam footage is lost, but when they need evidence in court the cameras work perfectly. Instead of a tool to monitor police body cams are a tool used by the police.

Reforms are useless when police don’t get punished for breaking the rules. Sometimes worse than useless.