AP Exclusive: Moonlighting police leave body cameras behind

When police officers in America’s cities put on their uniforms and  grab their weapons before moonlighting in security jobs at nightclubs,  hospitals, and ballparks, there’s one piece of equipment they often  leave behind — their body camera.

That’s because most police agencies that make the cameras mandatory  for patrol shifts don’t require or won’t allow body cameras for off-duty  officers even if they’re working in uniform, leaving a hole in policies  designed to increase oversight and restore confidence in law  enforcement.

Police departments contend that they have only a limited number of  body cameras or that there are too many logistical hurdles and costs  involved. But that argument doesn’t sit well with those who say it  shouldn’t matter whether an officer is on patrol or moonlighting at a  shopping mall.

“As long as they have real bullets, they need to have the body  cameras,” said John Barnett, a civil rights leader in Charlotte, North  Carolina, where shootings involving police have put use of the cameras  under scrutiny.

An Associated Press survey of the 20 biggest U.S. cities found that  nearly all have officers wearing or testing body cameras, but that only  five — Houston; San Antonio; San Francisco; Fort Worth, Texas; and San  Jose, California — have rules requiring them for uniformed officers  working outside their regular hours.

Full story: AP News


               

                                           

     

                                                        

                                          

                                                           

                


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