Do you think that the fact that these kinds of killings are getting media attention, will result in more awareness and therefore a change in the system?
Or do you think this is just used to cause racial division?
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GO!
No, it's not.Boomer wrote:I don't think cops will become less racist, but I feel each case like this brings us closer to cops being required to wear personal cameras, which is a step in the right direction, IMO.
Go on.Derived Absurdity wrote:No, it's not.Boomer wrote:I don't think cops will become less racist, but I feel each case like this brings us closer to cops being required to wear personal cameras, which is a step in the right direction, IMO.
That information, I have found, has been highly questionable. And a lot of studies aimed at illustrating the efficacy of body cams have been tentative in any case.Boomer wrote:Eh, that's possible but I find it highly unlikely. Granted studies on the subject are limited, but what information is out there suggests cameras have resulted in a decrease of incidents where police use force.
Further, no matter what the angle of the video is, surely having some video evidence is preferable to whichever narrative the police feel like spinning; police will bend over backwards to protect their own and the media sure as hell won't investigate further than needed when the police are painting their own versions of events, especially when the incident involves a black guy.
Further, no matter what the angle of the video is, surely having some video evidence is preferable to whichever narrative the police feel like spinning
Dr_Liszt wrote:Not if it's on people, no.
What you want is less state control no more.
How would police wearing cameras give the state more control?
Hope that cleared it for you.Dr_Liszt wrote:Not if it's on people, no.
What you want is less state control no more.
One major study, in Rialto. And there's no reason to think the body cameras by themselves had anything at all to with it; other causative factors may have been at play. And there is at least one other study, in Denver, where the police monitor claimed that police used force more often during the trial period where they had personal cameras on.Boomer wrote:While studies may be somewhat inconclusive they can't be completely ignored; to my knowledge there are no studies showing any correlation between police wearing personal cameras and an increase in use of force. Studies have shown quite the opposite, in fact.
Yes, this is all my point. Thank you. This is also something you were implying was not the case before, with the quote "surely having some video evidence is preferable to whichever narrative the police feel like spinning", as if "video evidence" and "whichever narrative the police feel like spinning" are mutually antagonistic and not simply able to reinforce the other.Boomer wrote: Of course it's a fact police will use video evidence to support their own narrative. It's the prerogative of both sides of a legal case to either use evidence or discredit it in anyway to advance their own case; in fact both sides often use the same piece of evidence to tell very different stories. Implementation of personal cameras won't be meant to solely incriminate police, but also be used to justify the use of lethal force.
Hahahahaha. Then those personal cameras would be configured to keep an eye on the protesters, not the police, from the perspectives of the police. They will be, as I said, trained to hold the citizens "accountable", not the cops. That is WHY the police bring cameras to political rallies in the first place, so that they can aid the future prosecution of whoever they arrest. If you have a citizen filming the police, that is very different from the police filming the citizen (and then keeping that footage away from the public and maybe manipulating it before presenting it to the courtroom), which is a dynamic you don't seem to be acknowledging. Police body cameras are MILES away from citizens filming them.Boomer wrote: Imagine if every police officer breaking up that OWS protest was wearing a personal camera. You could potentially have up to a dozen, if not more, HD-quality camera angles of what actually happened.
No, the video can in many ways make it worse. It can be wrenched out of context to make what it presents look far worse than it was, for example, which would make things very easy for a prosecutor. The cop can easily manipulate the jury to feel what he wants to feel as they look at it. The cops' word is already pedestalized in the courtroom, and supposedly incontrovertible video evidence will only make it worse.Boomer wrote:I'm not sure if this argument is backed by many real-world examples, but even if for some reason video evidence is only accepted from a police source and evidence from a civilian source is deemed impermissible, video can only be one-sided up to a degree; without the video it would simply be an officer's word against a civilian's, so the civilian would be in a similar if not worse situation. The fact of the matter is instances of police brutality are often recorded by no sources, let alone two.
Yes, some of them might not have. But that's not really relevant if the system still makes it very easy for a cop to twist the evidence in court and walk free. There are many institutional barriers preventing justice from police brutality, and if these barriers aren't torn down body cams are going to provide a very thin and ephemeral protection at best, and at worst false hope and imaginary safety.Boomer wrote:Which raises the question of whether these instances would have gone to trial at all if not for the video.
And again, this is the major point. I am not against recording police. I am against police having their own body cameras at their disposal.Boomer wrote:I guess the major point causing me to disagree with this idea is that having video evidence, no matter what angle or perspective it is recorded from, is almost always better than having no video evidence. Take the recent shooting of Walter Scott: the cop who murdered him created a blatantly false narrative, corroborated by his (lying) partner, which was already being run with by the media as the official story before video surface showing otherwise. Without said video there's little doubt in my mind the killing would have been deemed justified, and the murderer would be walking away scot-free.
Good thing I'm not trying to convince you of that.Boomer wrote:Tl;dr: You're going to be hard-pressed trying to convince me that some video evidence </= no video evidence.
Can you clarify what you are claiming with the Rialto study? It seems to me that you are using it as an example to Boomer on how cameras can increase force.One major study, in Rialto. And there's no reason to think the body cameras by themselves had anything at all to with it; other causative factors may have been at play. And there is at least one other study, in Denver, where the police monitor claimed that police used force more often during the trial period where they had personal cameras on.
Yeah, I wasn't clear. I was just pointing out that there was one study at least that supposedly showed an increase in force correlated with more body cams, contrary to Boomer's claim.Gypsy-Vanner wrote:Can you clarify what you are claiming with the Rialto study? It seems to me that you are using it as an example to Boomer on how cameras can increase force.
Either way, there is no downside to the camera's according to any of the studies that have been done and there is limited benefits so debating vest camera's is kind of pointless me thinks?
I'm curious on a few counts with this conclusion - that wearing vest cams increased the incidences of police violence.. mostly cos I can't think of a single reason why they would and would tend to assume that this means that more incidences of police violence were actually captured - rather than there being an actual increase in police violence, which would seem to support the use of vest cams.. but I can't find the study you referred..Yeah, I wasn't clear. I was just pointing out that there was one study at least that supposedly showed an increase in force correlated with more body cams, contrary to Boomer's claim.
I don't think I agree with this. It would provide the court with A piece of evidence that elevates the conversation from a he said she said (with the police testimony obviously taking precedence) to a "this is what happened - now you physically have to spin it so that it makes sense to get out of accountability" thing .. either way you look at it, it would still be harder (as opposed to impossible) for a cop to get out accountability than if the evidence wasn't there at all.a) It'll give police more power in the courtroom, by giving them an additional piece of evidence they can easily twist to their advantage. I've already gone over this one.
Well .. the footage will be trained on the citizen, which I kinda think is more important than training them on the police given, the courts job is to assess how reasonably the police behaved in response to the citizens actions - the citizens actions (where their hands are, what they have on them, whether they made any threatening moves or where just playing xbox) are far more important as pieces of evidence that what the cop is doing.. Plus .. if there are multiple police attending, then there should be footage of what the offending cop is doing in a broader sense.b) All of the footage captured will most likely be controlled by the police departments themselves, the very people the cameras are supposedly meant to hold to account. Many departments have already exempted footage from being released to the public citing the Freedom of Information Act, as they claim they aren't public records. They even argue they don't have to release footage after an investigation is over. So they'll be surveilling the public, NOT themselves, and they'll be able to store it for themselves (giving, as Liszt said, even more power to the state). What's more, a lot of this footage might be very personal, as police frequently enter peoples' private homes, and with body cams they'll be recording them.
See above. Dash cam footage is by its nature, filmed in the public domain where there is no expectation of privacy and so, no protections. Film taken inside a persons house would carry an expectation of privacy. I would suspect the laws in the states are similar to here where any footage taken on someone in their home would be subject to privacy laws.c) They might store and then release footage certain people would not want released, such as the people they're recording. Dash cam footage is already used by TMZ and Internet users for entertainment and humiliation purposes. With police with body cams entering peoples' homes and encountering them in potentially embarrassing situations, that might increase. The police will choose which footage to release and which not, and if they want to embarrass someone, this will give them easier means. And any footage released with probably be tilted in the cop's favor.
Once again - public domain = no expectation of privacy. Terms like "illegal surveillance state" are just emotive. The police have always had the right to establish someone's identity - the method used is redundant.d) It will almost certainly be used to help bolster the already intrusive and illegal surveillance state, which is growing stronger every year. High-tech surveillance gear and facial recognition technology in particular is already flowing into police departments at a fast rate, and with body cams they'll be able to tap into federal databases containing citizen photos when making routine traffic stops and whatnot. That's not going to further police accountability, it'll simply be utilized to increase state power.
Technically, they will be recording both, the camera may be trained on the citizen but it will also record the cops. As I discussed, I think its probably more important to record the citizen in order to police the policemens response to their actions than the other way around.. Also note, in most circumstances, there should be multiple cameras recording multiple things .e) And... most importantly... they will be FILMING THE CITIZEN, NOT THE COPS. They will put the CITIZENS UNDER SURVEILLANCE. Police body cams are not going to be aimed in on themselves, they will be AIMED OUTWARDS. From their perspective, not ours. They will be watching US, not the other way around. Bad if you want police accountability.
Got it from here. http://denver.cbslocal.com/2015/03/10/r ... rce-cases/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;thesalmonofdoubt wrote:I'm curious on a few counts with this conclusion - that wearing vest cams increased the incidences of police violence.. mostly cos I can't think of a single reason why they would and would tend to assume that this means that more incidences of police violence were actually captured - rather than there being an actual increase in police violence, which would seem to support the use of vest cams.. but I can't find the study you referred..
thesalmonofdoubt wrote:I don't think I agree with this. It would provide the court with A piece of evidence that elevates the conversation from a he said she said (with the police testimony obviously taking precedence) to a "this is what happened - now you physically have to spin it so that it makes sense to get out of accountability" thing .. either way you look at it, it would still be harder (as opposed to impossible) for a cop to get out accountability than if the evidence wasn't there at all.
Denver's independent police monitor, Nicholas Mitchell, also said police used force more often and citizens' complaints against officers rose during the cameras' six-month trial period in the city's busy downtown district. Police officials repeatedly said they expected the cameras would drive down those numbers.
So, technically, more body cams resulted in more people reporting police violence.. Intuitively, I imagine this could be explained by people knowing the police were recording their actions resulting in more people willing to bring the officers into accountability... which is a good thing right? .. or am I misinterpreting something?And, once again, it doesn't show that body cams increased police violence, just that more body cams was correlated with more violence
I really don't see how it will make it easier for police to manipulate evidence as opposed to provide personal testimony in the absence of evidence.. Sure, footage could be taken out of context but the job of the defendants attorney would be to demand that context. The whole of the footage would be available to the prosecution and the defence.. It all sounds like a perfect solution fallacy in so much as if we can't demonstrate that it could never be manipulated then its not as good as not having this evidence at all. My thoughts are still that we have this existing situation, where there are cases of police brutality that demand accountability and at the moment, determining guilt is left to eye witness testimony and the relative power of the cops word over the civilians.. providing video evidence of what occurred, is still a step up from where we are at right now.. more so in situations where the courts could demand that all officers on a scene provide their cam footage to corroborate testimony. The more footage from more angle from different people would have to lead to a situation where it is harder, not easier to manipulate the jury especially as against to a situation where no footage is available at all.Yeah, like I said, it'll make things easier for them, not harder. Video is very compelling evidence, and, like I said, studies have repeatedly shown that jurors are very easily misled by relatively irrelevant variables like angle or focus. Quick footage of a civilian protestor bumping into a cop, wrenched out of context, will make the prosecution's case easier.
Depends on whether you agree that this is the primary purpose of the exercise. My objective would be to make the cops accountable in term of taking these cases to court and removing ambiguity as much as that's possible. As long as this evidence can be subpoenaed in court, then objective met. Making these videos available to the public at large would have privacy implications that I would be more concerned with. The jury in a court represents the public so, providing they can witness the evidence, and courts have the power to subpoena it, then that concern, for the purpose of the legal system, is met.but the primary reason people want body cams is so that the world-at-large will be able to see a cop caught in a criminal act, that the public will have a record of what happened
Which really is the crux of the matter. Not so much that Cops aren't bound by privacy laws, cos my understanding is that they are, so that if a video was leaked by the police to the public that is protected by privacy laws, it would be a relatively easy matter to bring that to prosecution.I would be more reassured by privacy laws if I felt the cops would actually choose to follow them, and moreover that they would actually be punished if they didn't.
I don't disagree that America has privacy issues when it comes to monitoring its citizens, but more from the perspective of the range of powers the patriot act has given relevant authorities to monitor telephone exchanges or internet usage where there is an expectation of privacy.Terms like "illegal surveillance state" are accurate and descriptive and they get to the heart of the problem. America currently has the largest surveillance apparatus in the history of the world,
Well - I guess what I am saying is why should I be concerned about being under surveillance while I am in a public space? .. I pretty much assume that's the case as it stands and I pretty much expect that this is just an extension of what's always been the case. I just can't think of a case where this would cause me an enormous amount of concern?Knowing there's no "expectation of privacy" is quite a bit different than thinking that citizens under surveillance essentially all the time is a good idea. There's a happy medium somewhere here, my man.
He wasn't claiming the Rialto study showed the opposite. When he said "One major study, in Rialto.", it was in response to my sentence "Studies have shown quite the opposite, in fact.", trying to contradict my pluralizing of "studies" by pointing out there's only been one. While I feel the Rialto study is the most thorough and comprehensive, there have been other studies in Phoenix and Mesa, Arizona, as well as Aberdeen, Scotland, and Plymouth, England. Also, there's a wiki page with information on the subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_worn_videoGypsy-Vanner wrote:DA, my initial post was asking you to clarify because you cited the rialto study as an example of increase in force from police wearing them when that is most definitely not the case. The Rialto study showed the opposite.
Maybe is off base. But you have to remember the police is inherently a repressive force from the state. Not saying is not necessary but that it is inherently there to control and repress the population so we must be careful with any sort of power we give them.Boomer wrote:The results of the studies might be correlational or they could be causational, but they shouldn't be brushed aside when every study is showing a net positive result.
Yours and his claim that cameras should be trained on police is off base. In the context of use of force what police are allowed to do is entirely predicated upon the actions of a citizen, thus we need to see the citizen to know whether the officer's actions are justified or not.
As for the rest of his points I'm not really in the mood to discuss the probability of some fairytale future Orwellian dystopia when we can't even agree on facts and studies in the here and now.
No. 35 of the cases weren't recorded because the officers were off-duty, but the other 45 cases were of officers who had cameras on them, and more than half of those cases weren't recorded because they either weren't activated or they didn't record anything. That's what I'm referring to.There is a privately run police monitor that objected to the findings but there is no references or citations. He claimed that the cameras didn't record most of use of force cases…but it's important to point out that well over half of those cases involved off duty officers working side jobs as security guards etc… They would not be required to turn on the cameras so this monitors claims seem off base?
Yes. I basically skimmed these. The third is an article.As for the jury being manipulated by an attorney into seeing something out of context, that is a valid concern but not fully substantiated as there is very little actual data to support it. If there's a study out there that is based on actual research and data then can you provide a link?
I'm not trying to give an impression that you're against all video evidence, I'm just baffled at being so ardently against video evidence from a police perspective as, in my opinion, having video evidence from any angle helps garner the truth in the vast majority of cases.Derived Absurdity wrote:You're giving off the strong impression that you think I'm simply against all video evidence. Which is funny, as I explicitly said that wasn't the case earlier.
I'm getting tired of you misrepresenting my points and not responding or even acknowledging many of the things I say. You do that all the time. Please stop it.
I also think it's sort of funny that "illegal surveillance state" is apparently emotive and can be discarded because of that, while "some fairytale future Orweillian dystopia" is apparently not.
Which is why I said that I have nothing against cameras filming public places 24/7. These cameras would be at fixed places, and therefore filming everyone.Gendo wrote:Whether cameras would reduce, increase, or have no impact on police brutality and other abuses of power is a matter of objective fact that can be shown with studies and such. But The fact remains that police wearing cameras means that the civilian is under video surveillance while dealing with the police.
Ok. I'm trying to find the audit that was done and if I had looked closer I'd have seen that a word had been highlighted in one of the articles I had read which indicated a link to the audit. Duh. And I did find an article just posted about a use of force incident which resulted in the officer being suspended for 4 days without pay. It seems this Nick Mitchell public monitor's audit findings lit a fire under the officers butts to use the camera's properly. Here's the reportNo. 35 of the cases weren't recorded because the officers were off-duty, but the other 45 cases were of officers who had cameras on them, and more than half of those cases weren't recorded because they either weren't activated or they didn't record anything. That's what I'm referring to.
Ok, thanks. I apologize. All is well.Boomer wrote:I'm not trying to give an impression that you're against all video evidence, I'm just baffled at being so ardently against video evidence from a police perspective as, in my opinion, having video evidence from any angle helps garner the truth in the vast majority of cases.Derived Absurdity wrote:You're giving off the strong impression that you think I'm simply against all video evidence. Which is funny, as I explicitly said that wasn't the case earlier.
I'm getting tired of you misrepresenting my points and not responding or even acknowledging many of the things I say. You do that all the time. Please stop it.
I also think it's sort of funny that "illegal surveillance state" is apparently emotive and can be discarded because of that, while "some fairytale future Orweillian dystopia" is apparently not.
Also, I apologize if I gave the impression that I'm not acknowledging/ignoring some of your points. It's simply that between salmon and Draco they said much of what I would have said anyways, so I didn't feel like repeating a point that was already made, but I probably should have made that known to you.
Lastly, I'm not trying to be overly crucial of your concerns of a surveillance state, as I agree civil liberties have been under major attack since 9/11. I'm just not convinced that police officers wearing cameras is an instance where civil liberties will be infringed upon.