Boston PD – Body Worn Cameras

Below are links to 2 articles that report Boston PD’s progress on it’s department wide implementation of body worn cameras.   The last link is to the report on the implantation of BWCs

“In January 2015, the Boston Police Department (BPD) committed to implement a pilot body worn camera (BWC) program for its officers. This pilot was intended to help answer policy questions about how the system would operate if and when fully implemented and to address concerns of officers and community members on the use of the technology. Boston Mayor Martin Walsh and Boston Police Commissioner William Evans committed to a rigorous evaluation of this pilot program.”

– This is an excerpt from the Final Report for the evaluation of the implementation of BWCs.

NPR WBUR radio report on Boston PD Body Worn Cameras

Phys.org article on Boston PD Body Worn Cameras

Here is the link to the study:

THE IMPACTS OF BODY WORN CAMERAS ON POLICE-CITIZEN ENCOUNTERS, POLICE PROACTIVITY, AND POLICE – COMMUNITY RELATIONS IN BOSTON

Precision Policing

William Bratton one of the Greatest Leaders in Policing talks about his latest concept of policing – Precision Policing.  Here is an excerpt from his recent article:

“Fortunately, a Peel-inspired template exists for how policing can effectively confront the Great Divide, prevent crime and disorder, and address other pressing problems such as the opioid epidemic, homelessness, and quality-of-life concerns—a strategy built on lessons from earlier crucibles, best practices from around the country, and effective collaboration among political leaders, the police, and the public. Coauthor Bratton and his executive team, of which coauthor Murad was a member, named it “precision policing.””

Links to Bratton’s article and interview from the City Journal:

William Bratton – Precision Policing in the City-Journal

Interview: Bratton on “Precision Policing”

 

How to Use Armed Police

via How to Use Armed Police

Why Armed Police need to Answer Non-Law Enforcement Type Calls

In the article “How Use Armed Police” poses the question “What are the situations for which we want people who have the capacity to use deadly force to show up?”  The idea is to have is to have Community Service Officers (CSO) respond to and handle non-law enforcement type calls.

The evidence used to support the need for more CSOs is: because of ongoing tensions between police and African Americans, the broken 911 system, the dangers associated with an armed police response, and the fact that unarmed police personnel already do tasks like write parking tickets, conduct traffic control, and provide funeral escorts that police must rethink the role of armed officers.

Reducing the role of armed police to strict law enforcement would a grave mistake for policing.  It would be a fatal flaw for policing to eliminate the neutral, noncriminal, and nonviolent contacts between armed officers and citizens. 

It is understandable why government and police executives would want to have unarmed officers respond to minor nonviolent calls for service.  This would decrease costs for the police department.  It would decrease demands on armed police.  Some police departments already use less trained and unarmed personnel to respond to police calls for service.

There are also several reasons why armed police only answering dangerous law enforcement calls would further exacerbate police community relations.  A decrease in service-oriented calls would decrease the types of friendly non-confrontational interactions that occur at these types of calls.  This would increase the sentiment that armed police in their community are an “occupational army”.  Some nonlaw enforcement calls turn into very dangerous calls where an armed response would be preferable.

The majority of calls for police are nonlaw enforcement in nature.  It is in this area that community policing thrives, relationships are developed, and where the human side of police shines.  Removing armed police (the traditional police officer) from nonlaw enforcement, service-oriented types of calls will only drive a wider and deeper wedge between the police and the community.

California’s Prop 47 reduced felony drug arrest rates, racial disparities

After the passage of California’s Proposition 47, felony drug arrest rates declined and racial disparities among these arrests decreased.
— Read on journalistsresource.org/studies/government/criminal-justice/prop-47-racial-disparities-drug

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