• ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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    7 hours ago

    With body cameras, law enforcement agencies could expand their surveillance capacity, mitigate police brutality lawsuits, create “highly controllable evidence” against the largely poor, largely Black citizens of whom police often seek to capture footage, and quell social unrest by creating “comprehensive digital archives” of attendees at protests for social change"

    Did you read this part? It pretty much contradicts everything you said.

    • Pfeffy@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Yes, I read it but I don’t see any evidence to think that their stance is correct. Just because somebody writes something doesn’t mean it is correct or even accurate. There’s no citation for anything except one study demonstrating that the footage is not used to convict police officers very often, which is the real problem.

      • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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        6 hours ago

        https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/articles/research-body-worn-cameras-and-law-enforcement

        “Across these evaluations, researchers looked at a range of outcomes, including use of force, citizen complaints, arrests, and assaults on officers. Four of the body-worn camera programs evaluated were found to have no, limited, or even negative effects.”

        https://cebcp.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/BWCpaperLumetal.pdf

        “Prosecutors, however, rarely bring cases against the police (Skolnick & Fyfe, 1993), and it remains to be seen whether this will change much as a result of BWCs. In their study of the use of BWCs in the courts, Merola et al. (2016) found that nearly all (93.0%) responding prosecutors’ offices in jurisdictions that use BWCs use them primarily to prosecute citizens. Not surprisingly, 80.0% of responding prosecutors in Merola et al.’s survey support BWC use by the police, and 63.0% feel cameras will assist prosecutors more than defense attorneys”

        I know that probably no amount of research and evidence will change your mind but those are pretty easy to find so I just leave it here for other people to see.

        • Pfeffy@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          I can’t tell if you are agreeing with me or not. I just said the real problem is that it’s not used to prosecute police officers enough. Are you disagreeing with me citing one study that said four programs potentially had some negative outcome?

          If body cameras are good for police, why do police not want to wear them?

          • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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            6 hours ago

            Ok, this part may not be easy to understand. There were looking at use of force, citizen complaints, arrests and assaults on officers. The theory is that thanks to the use of body cams there will be less cases of use of force, less citizen complaints and less assaults on officers. The study says that in some of the evaluated body cam programs they found that those statistics didn’t change or that they got more cases of use of force, citizen complaints and so on. Basically, it’s not clear if the cameras help reduce police violence at all.

            The second part (which you ignored) says that the cameras are actually used mostly to prosecute citizens, not police. Basically, thanks to the cameras police can easily prove offenses and convict people. Just like the first article said, police us body cams to surveil and prosecute people. Prosecutors like cameras because they make their job easier. You can deduct from this that police also likes cameras. Your claim that “police does not want to wear cameras” is baseless. There’s probably some opposition at first but once they et used to them it’s just another tool used to oppress people.