As I wrote when this silliness started, these cops are too arrogant and out of control to let this go past anything but a PR show when the media was watching
Police Body Camera Pilot Program Set To End In
Reston District
Researchers are surveying local residents and
officers on what they thought of body cameras worn by Fairfax County police.
By Chris Gaudet, Patch Staff
RESTON, VA — A pilot program to test body cameras on
Fairfax County police officers ended Friday in the Reston, Mason and Mount
Vernon police districts. Officers began wearing the body cameras and undergoing
training in mid-February. The program was fully implemented by mid-March.
The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors approved the
90-day pilot in November, and it was extended to 180 days to better assess its
impact. A total of 203 body-worn cameras was distributed to officers in the
Reston, Mount Vernon and Mason districts, as well as to Motor Squad officers
and Animal Protection officers. Not all officers wore body cameras, and school
resource officers did not participate.
The three police districts were selected for the
program because of their communities' diversity, the various types of calls for
service and incidents resulting in the use of force, the Police Department
said.
Under the program, officers wearing body cameras
recorded any call for service, law enforcement action, subject stop, traffic
stop, search or police service. Officers did not record in certain situations
or places like courthouses and medical facilities.
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American University researchers are studying how the
program worked. This includes surveying residents and officers on their
perceptions of the body cameras. A full analysis could be released early next
year.
Like in-car videos, the body camera program is
designed to give Fairfax County police a chance to build trust with the
community and bolster accountability. Depending on how the pilot works out, the
Board of Supervisors could consider a permanent body camera program.
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