Remington Alessi was arrested on Saturday December 13 in Houston,
Texas. He was arrested while engaging in a nonviolent protest against
police brutality. He gives us his account of what he learned in the back
of a squad car.
“We’re going to go ahead and turn off the personal video devices
going forward, so be sure all officers have them turned off when
engaging the protesters.” The words cut through me and chilled my spine
as I sat, helplessly handcuffed in the back of a Houston Police cruiser
after being arrested in the midst of a protest.
As an activist who has been around the block a few times, I knew that
little would endanger a crowd more than a crowd of officers who had
just received an order from higher up to disable their own personal
accountability.
Barely into the pilot program, the Houston Police Department’s
commanding officers managed to brazenly display how easily the personal
video devices can be misused. Per an earlier interview,
“Capt. Mike Skillern, who heads HPD’s gang unit and is involved in
testing the cameras, said his fellow officers act “a little more
professionally” when wearing the devices.” But how do they act when they
switch the devices off? If officers had their way, no one would
know.The biggest fault here lies in the physical design of the cameras
themselves. The VIEVU LE3 model camera
is employed by HPD and is worn by over four thousand police agencies,
according to the company’s website. The camera’s most conspicuous
feature is an easily operated off switch, which can functionally slide
over the lens of the camera at any time an officer feels the need to
remove any potential accountability. Hyperbole fails in describing how
much of a problem it is for police to control when video is being
recorded.
READ MORE:http://www.blacklistednews.com/Houston_P.D._Orders_All_Officers_Turn_Off_Body_Cameras_During_Protest/40163/0/38/38/Y/M.html
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