The Need for a Standardized Body-Worn Camera Policy

Based on a survey of all federal, provincial, municipal, and First Nations police services in Canada, 36 of 172 Canadian police services are using body-worn cameras (BWCs) as of 2022. Twenty-seven of these services shared their BWC policy with the researchers of the source article. Almost all BWC po...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Saulnier, Alana
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Applied Police Briefings 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://appliedpolicebriefings.com/index.php/APB/article/view/4859
Description
Summary:Based on a survey of all federal, provincial, municipal, and First Nations police services in Canada, 36 of 172 Canadian police services are using body-worn cameras (BWCs) as of 2022. Twenty-seven of these services shared their BWC policy with the researchers of the source article. Almost all BWC policies provided activation instructions, required subject notification of BWC use as soon as reasonably possible, did not allow BWC footage to substitute for other forms of evidence, and permitted users to view their BWC footage. However, some important topics were not consistently discussed in existing policies, including issues around camera buffering, victim-sensitive practices, and services publicly disclosing BWC footage in the public interest. Police services should work towards using a nationally standardized BWC policy to promote evidence-based practice, increase public confidence in police, reduce resource wastage in services acquiring BWCs, and decrease liability for services using a shared standard.