国产视频

In Short

What Cameras Cannot See

What cameras cannot see_image.jpeg

Who鈥檚 watching whom鈥攁nd what can they see?

When it comes to police-worn cameras, these questions don’t
yet have a consistent answer鈥攁nd with the rush to implement the technology now
well past the tipping point, those answers matter.

Over 30 states and the District of Columbia have now either
introduced or passed legislation addressing body-worn cameras. Earlier this month, The President鈥檚
Task Force on 21st Century Policing released its with an
entire pillar of recommendations around technology and social media and the
Bureau of Justice Assistance released a , an online clearinghouse for sharing information,
resources, and research on 鈥渂ody-worn camera-related subjects.鈥

Against the backdrop of
#BlackLivesMatter and now the #SayHerName , the landscape of
whose experiences are witnessed, named, and validated by the public has grown
increasingly complex鈥攁nd in the face of such complexity, cameras offer what
appears to many to be an invitingly simple solution. But that purported
simplicity may be deceiving; are expressing concern about the risks of cameras and arguing
against treating them like a panacea for the problems around race and policing
in communities across America.

鈥淲ith each of these developments,
and as local and national developments unfold, myriad concerns are coming to
light about the technology and the conditions for its deployment that will best
serve public safety and safeguard our rights,鈥 observed Open Technology
Institute Fellow Seeta Pe帽a Gangadharan at a recent event at 国产视频. Joined in
conversation by Justin Ready, Nicole Austin-Hillery, Sarah
Brayne, Brian K. Jordan, and Malkia Cyril, Gangadharan identified a key
question facing advocates and policymakers alike: 鈥淲hat institutional and regulatory choices do we
need to make now鈥攂efore police
cameras become the status quo?鈥

It鈥檚 critical that ask that question on the
front end, said Brayne鈥攁 sociologist and researcher at Microsoft Research New
England鈥攂ecause 鈥渙nce a new technology is rolled out in an institutional
setting such as a police department, it鈥檚 really hard to scale back.鈥 From her
own research doing ride-alongs with the Los Angeles Police Department, Brayne
speculated that cameras might have 鈥渦nanticipated downstream consequences.鈥
Police officers inclined to cut community members they know a little slack
might no longer do so. Knowing they鈥檒l be recorded might deter people with
loved ones in precarious legal standing from calling the cops when they need
help.

In times of social upheaval, 鈥渨e do look to innovations, whether
it鈥檚 policy innovations or technological innovations as a solution,鈥 noted
Ready, a professor of criminology and criminal justice at Arizona State
University who has been in the
field for the past few years studying the use of cameras by police in Mesa,
Arizona. After following 100 officers for a year, 50 of whom wore cameras and
50 of whom did not, Ready had around 30,000 videos of police encounters with
the Mesa community. He found that officers wearing cameras initiated about 15
percent more citizen contacts, conducted 10 percent fewer stop-and-frisks, and
wrote 14 percent more tickets than the non-camera officers.

鈥淲e want to
adopt [camera technology] to solve problems that happen disproportionately in
minority communities. But we have to remember that over the long run there are
costs,鈥 Ready warned. 鈥淎ny technology does both harm and good.鈥 Ready鈥檚 remarks
resonated with observations from Cyril, the executive director of the Center for Media Justice. 鈥淭he
fact is [that] video is powerful,鈥 she said, but 鈥渨e鈥檙e talking about inserting
an unproven piece of technology into Jim Crow policing.鈥

鈥淚 don鈥檛
believe body-worn cameras are the answer, but I believe they鈥檙e inevitable,鈥 Cyril
continued, describing her encounters with protestors in Ferguson and Baltimore.
鈥淭he solution that has been offered to them is body-worn cameras, but that
doesn’t mean that鈥檚 what they want. What they want is to feel safe.鈥

Whether or
not cameras can truly foster a feeling of safety in communities is a paramount concern
for Austin-Hillery and the Brennan
Center for Justice, where she is Director and Counsel. 鈥淏ody-worn cameras
are supposed to provide accountability, transparency, and鈥攍et鈥檚 get down to it鈥攖ruthfulness鈥
in the pursuit of criminal justice, she said. But whether in Cleveland or
Ferguson or elsewhere, 鈥渃ameras are a part of the larger conversation [about
justice] and will only be a part of a larger solution.鈥 The ultimate goal,
Austin-Hillery stressed, 鈥渉as to be figuring out how we make our criminal
justice system better for all of us鈥濃攃itizens and police officers alike.聽

Jordan,
Chief of Police at Howard University and a law enforcement veteran with over 30
years experience, agreed with Austin-Hillery: 鈥渢he general premise of policing
is to first be safe and second is to make people safe.鈥 The now-infamous
incidents involving Rodney King, Oscar Grant, Eric Garner, and Walter Scott
were all captured on video and all prompted different results from the
communities in question, in part because 鈥渙nce that video is there, it鈥檚 still
not going to be seen the same way by everybody.鈥

How cameras
fit into programs of community policing was an open question among the
panelists, as was who would have access to the potentially massive pool of raw
data produced by them. 鈥淐ommunity policing鈥s about relationships. Cameras are
about automation. Those are opposing things,鈥 argued Cyril, who also underscored
that 鈥渙fficers are community
members.鈥 For Jordan, cameras and community policing boil down to 鈥渨hat [communities]
want from their police.鈥 鈥淭he debate [over cameras] is necessary,鈥 he
concluded. 鈥淲e have to work it down to the point that the police wearing the
cameras buy into it and the communities being monitored buy into it.鈥

Consensus
emerged around the need for further information-gathering and public engagement
on all sides on the issue of cameras. Ready and Cyril both articulated an
urgent need for further study and research, while Austin-Hillery cited a
necessity for citizens to engage their lawmakers at multiple levels of
government. We may look to the President for leadership on policing in the 21st
century, she said, but 鈥渋t鈥檚 that city council member in your local community
who is making decisions that affect your lives on a daily basis.鈥

So what do we need to do before
cameras become the status quo? For one thing, we need to remember that
technology is inextricably bound together with its social context and human
interaction. 鈥淩aw data does not always speak for itself,鈥 reflected Brayne in
comments that captured a major theme of the evening, 鈥渋t requires
颈苍迟别谤辫谤别迟补迟颈辞苍.鈥

More 国产视频 the Authors

jane-greenway-carr_person_image.jpeg
Jane Greenway Carr

Editorial Fellow

What Cameras Cannot See