Fairfax County Police Body Camera Program To Begin In Phases


NOBODY trusts these hoods .If you’re a young person considering working with the Fairfax County Police Department, stop and think about that. EVEN THEIR EMPLOYER DOESN’T TRUST THEM. Do you really want to spend twenty years of your life around people like this? You can do better.

   

The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors approved a body camera program for police officers.

By Emily Leayman, Patch Staff

MOUNT VERNON, VA — The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors approved a permanent body camera program for police officers on Tuesday. The program is set to begin in May 2020 and will be implemented in phases over three years.
The approval follows a 2018 pilot program involving the Reston, Mason and Mount Vernon police district stations. These will be the first three stations implementing the permanent program. All district stations and other key operational staff will receive body cameras.
According to the implementation plan, 416 body cameras will be issued in fiscal year 2020, followed by 338 in 2021 and 456 in 2022. Positions will be added to the Fairfax County Police Department, Office of the Commonwealth's Attorney and Department of Information Technology.
Once the program is fully phased in, it will give officers 1,210 body cameras and require $6.65 million in baseline funding. One-time funding was included in the fiscal year 2020 budget, and baseline funding will come in the 2021 budget and future years as needed. The $4.3 million in funding for this year was available from the Reserve for Ad-Hoc Police Practices Review Commission.
Fairfax County Police
Feedback on body cameras came from an American University research team's survey during the pilot program, which ran from March 3, 2018 to Sept. 1, 2018. The researchers surveyed 603 residents who had an interaction with an officer during the pilot program as well as two squads of officers before and after the program. Results saw overwhelming support for body cameras from residents. Opinions among officers were mixed; one squad's perception of body cameras became more negative after the program, while the other's became slightly more positive.

A loon is a loon is loon


There was an article, produced by NBC News entitled  “How this police department is fighting for its officers’ mental health after suicides” which focused on the Fairfax County Police department and police suicides in general.


That’s peachy keen but the article completely failed to mention other research that showed that police isn’t so much the cause of suicide as is the fact that our society doesn’t vet the people we hire to do police work. In other words, these guys are disturbed human being and would consider suicide if they were cops or plumbers or lawyers.

Don’t think its true?
Spend some time with a Fairfax County Cop and then let me know what you think.

You're damn right they should be on camera


McLean group supports countywide police-body-cam effort
by BRIAN TROMPETER, Sun Gazette Newspapers

Fairfax County officials should move ahead with implementing a body-worn-camera program for the county’s police force, according to a resolution passed Sept. 4 by the McLean Citizens Association’s board of directors.
 “Body-worn cameras are a win for all of us, members of our community, the police and the criminal-justice system,” said MCA president Dale Stein.  “What they record can be reliable evidence for investigations and prosecutions, a deterrent against unjustified complaints, and pluses for transparency  and accountability.”
As of last year, more than 80 percent of large U.S. police forces were using such cameras or planning to do so, the resolution noted.
If implemented countywide, the Fairfax County Police Department’s camera program would cost an estimated $30 million over five years.
County police conducted a pilot program at the department’s Mason, Mount Vernon and Reston district stations between March and August 2018, with half of the officers at each station being assigned cameras and half not.
A report on the pilot program, released in July this year, found county residents overwhelmingly supported widespread adoption of the camera program. Police agreed the program would improve evidence-gathering efforts, increase departmental transparency and help settle complaints against officers.
MCA’s resolution asks the county to begin implementing the body-worn-camera program as soon as possible this fiscal year. MCA board members noted they would not have supported the program if it would have competed budgetarily with officers’ salaries.