Federal officers in Minneapolis to get body cameras
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The Topeka Police Department has new policies about body camera footage after years of community debate following police-involved fatal shootings. On Jan. 28, police chief Chris Vallejo announced two new policies: Policy 434 Body-Worn Cameras and Policy 804 Records Maintenance and Release.
The Los Angeles Police Commission tabled a vote on proposed changes to the department's data retention policy, expressing concern useful videos could be lost in a purge of old records.
TOPEKA (KSNT) – The Topeka Police Department held a press conference on Wednesday to discuss upcoming policy changes regarding body cameras worn by its officers. Topeka Police Chief Chris Vallejo said newly established policies within the department will provide a path forward for releasing body camera footage connected to officer-involved shootings.
The news comes after a year of beta-testing various technology and brands. "The time for action is now," Garcetti said. "We are executing a contract to deploy more than 700 body cams in Central, Mission and Newton Divisions." The cost is about $1.5 million ...
RALEIGH (WTVD) -- A national group is speaking against a proposed Raleigh police body camera policy. The policy would allow Raleigh police officers to review video from body cameras before writing a report on an incident; however, the group thinks the ...
Ross Township police officers are on track to be issued body-worn cameras by the end of summer. Commissioners voted unanimously June 15 to approve a policy governing the police department’s use of body cameras to record encounters between law enforcement ...
The Los Angeles Police Department is seeking a policy change that would allow millions of videos collected from officers' body-worn and dashboard-mounted cameras to be