![]() Officers saved 3,290 recordings from arrests, car stops, field interviews and other incidents, out of 3,441 incidents in which recordings were mandatory, the inspections found. ![]() The inspectors found many officers were using the devices appropriately, but others were violating the rules - often because they failed to record. The Police Department conducted more than 250 inspections of body camera videos last year to assess compliance by officers with the rules governing the technology, according to records obtained by The Baltimore Sun under a Public Information Act request. ![]() "We have long supported the use of police body cameras to help identify police misconduct, but such footage is meaningless if prosecutors continue to rely on these officers, especially if they do so without disclosing their bad acts." "Officer misconduct has been a pervasive issue at the Baltimore Police Department, which is exacerbated by the lack of accountability." Levi said. "So even if it is indeed true that they simply staged a re-creation of finding the drugs, these officers have not only destroyed their own credibility, they have single-handedly destroyed the credibility of every piece of video where BPD officers find contraband without a clear lead-in that negates the possibility of it being staged," Rocah said. Rocah also said "there is zero reason to trust any video or any statement from any of these officers" given what was clearly observable in the video flagged by the public defender's office. Rocah said it was "insane" that state laws that bar the disclosure of disciplinary records for police officers would prevent the public from seeing the results of the Police Department's investigation or knowing how it punished the officers internally. Rocah criticized the state's attorney's office for "the total lack of any apparent systemic response" to the incident, including putting the officer on the stand in another case after the video was flagged. The other two officers in the video also are listed as witnesses in pending cases, the office said.ĭavid Rocah, senior staff attorney with the ACLU of Maryland, said that even "a faked recreation of officers finding the untied bag of drugs" would still be "potentially criminal" and should be a violation of police rules. It said in a statement that the officer seen handling the plastic bag in the video is a witness in 53 other active cases. The public defender's office said the state's attorney's office needs to do more in response to the discovery of the video. There's going to be a lot more done to get to the bottom of what really happened." But that's not the complete investigation. "Everyone needs to take a deep breath, take a step back, and let the investigation run its course," he said. Gene Ryan, president of the local police union that represents rank-and-file officers, urged people not to "jump to conclusions." "It's certainly a possibility that we're looking into, to see if the officers in fact replaced drugs that they had already discovered in order to document their discovery with their body-worn cameras on," he said. ![]() ![]() "So when these experienced detectives found a bag with a knot at the top, that suggested to them that there's probably an un-knotted bag nearby, because the drug dealers won't unknot and then re-knot a bag every time they go retrieve drugs from it to distribute."ĭavis said police were investigating whether the video flagged by the public defender's office showed the officer "re-creating" his discovery of the second, un-knotted bag of drugs. "If I'm engaged in the distribution of drugs, I'll probably have two bags: one with a knot at the top, and one that's unknotted at the top that allows me access to the drugs inside the bag so I can easily retrieve them and then sell or distribute them," Davis said. ![]()
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