Police to wear body-worn cameras

Police in Warwickshire will be wearing body-worn cameras as of next year.
Police in Warwickshire will be wearing body-worn cameras next year.Police in Warwickshire will be wearing body-worn cameras next year.
Police in Warwickshire will be wearing body-worn cameras next year.

The new equipment comes as part of the Warwickshire Police and Crime Commissioner Philip Seccombe’s new police and crime plan to invest in technology modernisation.

Police in Warwickshire will be equipped with body-worn cameras in a phased roll-out to frontline officers from next year, following approval of funding by Police and Crime Commissioner Philip Seccombe.

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The new cameras follow on from announced upgrades in mobile technology and improved IT and telephony systems.

Firearms and Taser-trained officers will be among the first to receive the equipment, followed by patrol officers and all front-line operational officers, which includes those in the Safer Neighbourhood Teams, gaining body-worn cameras during 2017.

Officers in the West Mercia police area will be similarly equipped.

The initial purchase cost for the rollout across the two forces is around £1 million.

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Philip Seccombe, Warwickshire Police and Crime Commissioner, said: “This significant investment in new technology is great news, both for frontline police officers and also for the public. Body worn cameras will help officers to achieve better outcomes and capture important evidence to bring cases to court.

“Speaking to officers, I know this is something that they welcome. Body worn video can also help to enhance their safety when they deal with challenging situations, as people often modify their behaviour and become less aggressive when they know they are being recorded on camera and that evidence can be used in court.

“Having a clear and irrefutable picture of what has happened in any incident is valuable, not only from an evidential perspective, but also because it provides the public with a record of how the police have acted.

“This greater openness and transparency will be very beneficial, for example when dealing with complaints against officers, where I believe it will help to reduce the numbers of illegitimate allegations being made, while at the same time allowing the thorough investigation of legitimate complaints to be carried out in a much more efficient and timely way.

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“Introducing the technology will require a phased roll-out but I am pleased that by the end of 2017 we will be in a position to see front-line officers in all parts of the force fully equipped.”

The cameras will be attached to police officers’ uniforms to capture video and audio evidence, which can then be used to support criminal prosecutions.

According to police the cameras do not continuously record, as under the Data Protection Act 1998 police officers have a duty to inform a person that their actions are being recorded.

The police have also said that the devices themselves are also designed to make it very clear to the public when they are capturing video and audio.