Body Cams Help Monitor Cops But Can Invade Privacy

Body Cams Help Monitor Cops But Can Invade Privacy
AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File

In the course of their work, police officers encounter people who are intoxicated, distressed, injured or abused. The officers routinely ask for key identifying information like addresses, dates of birth and driver’s license numbers, and they frequently enter people’s homes and other private spaces.

With the advent of police body cameras, this information is often captured in police video recordings – which some states’ open-records laws make available to the public.

Starting in the summer of 2014, as part of research on police adoption of body-worn cameras within two agencies in Washington state, I spent hours riding in patrol vehicles, hanging out at police stations, interviewing officers, observing police officers while they worked and administering surveys.

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