Portland city council approves $2.6 million to equip police with body cameras
The Oregon decision, ending a decade-long debate, complies with a DOJ body camera policy requirement
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- The City Council in Portland, Oregon, has unanimously approved $2.6 million for permanent police body cameras.
- Approximately 800 uniformed officers interacting with the public are set to have body-worn cameras by the summer.
- Mayor Ted Wheeler acknowledged that implementing the policy might take time, emphasizing the need for officer training.
The City Council in Portland, Oregon, approved $2.6 million for permanent police body cameras in a unanimous vote, a crucial step toward the city no longer being among the last major U.S. police agencies without the technology.
All of the city's roughly 800 uniformed officers who interact with the public will have body-worn cameras by the summer, after training and further negotiations with the police union, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported Wednesday.
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But only around 300 patrol officers will be required to wear them routinely on their shifts, the news outlet reported.
Roughly 500 other sworn members, including detectives and sergeants, will put on their cameras when they interact with the public, said police spokesperson Mike Benner.
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The City Council's approval for the cameras came after a 60-day pilot program that lasted from August to October and equipped 150 officers with cameras. The vote makes the pilot program permanent.
Among the 50 largest police departments in the country, Portland, until this year, was the only one that had not yet deployed body cameras.
A settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice requires Portland's police bureau to implement a body camera policy. The settlement stemmed from a 2012 lawsuit brought by the federal government against Portland over allegations its police used excessive force against people with mental illness.
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Wednesday's vote followed nearly a decade of at times contentious negotiations between the city and the police union over the technology. Among the major disagreements was whether officers who use deadly force can review camera footage before writing reports or being interviewed by investigators.
Under a negotiated policy between the city and its police union, officers who use deadly force won’t get to view their camera’s footage until after they’ve provided an audio-recorded statement to internal affairs within 48 hours of the incident.
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During Wednesday's vote, Mayor Ted Wheeler said the policy might take time to implement.
"It’s going to take some time for us to phase in the rollout of body cameras and make sure that everybody has sufficient training and sufficient understanding of how these tools will work," he said.