|
Footage ≠ transparency or accountability
Body-worn cameras can provide close-up footage of law enforcement interactions with the public. In some cases, that footage has been useful. But in the iPhone era, an absence of video evidence is far from the primary barrier to ending police violence. Clear footage of law enforcement brutalizing people captured from multiple angles by bystanders and journalists alike has become disturbingly common.
So what’s the problem? Body-worn cameras do not challenge the structural impunity embedded within the culture and operation of police departments. Cameras are only worthwhile if they are consistently used, and if the footage is reliably accessible and used to hold officers to account. Officers can, and frequently do, turn their cameras on late, off early, or not on at all. A 2025 audit of the Philadelphia Police Department found that during vehicle stops, officers activated body-worn cameras late or deactivated them early roughly 40 percent of the time.
Even when misconduct is captured, departments routinely fail to take meaningful action to prevent future harm. Three years before Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd by kneeling on his neck in 2020, he was repeatedly recorded on body-worn camera footage using the same dangerous restraint on other people, including a woman and a 14-year-old boy whom he choked until he lost consciousness. Supervisors who saw the footage did nothing to stop the behavior.
In some cases, police departments and even local governments go as far as to actively withhold or mislead the public about incriminating footage. After the police killing of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald in Chicago, widespread protests erupted when it was revealed that dashboard camera footage had been concealed from his family and the public for more than a year. A ProPublica investigation examining 101 police killings in a single month in June 2022 found that although body-worn cameras were used in 79 cases, footage was released in only 33 of them—often more than a year later.
|