HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021 12-29 Problem officers in most Minnesota agencies not required to keep body cameras on STARTRIBUNEProblem officers in most Minnesota
agencies not required to keep body
cameras on
Several years ago, state officials suggested that some should wear
them when responding to all calls
By Libor Jany (https://www.startribune.com/lbor-jany/6134700/) Star Tribune
DECEMBER 28, 2021 — 6:40PM
The League of Minnesota Cities' 2019 model policy for law enforcement agencies with
body cameras recommended special rules requiring that any officer with a proven
history of misconduct be required to use the devices.
Two years later, fewer than 10 departments across the state have adopted such
guidelines. A Star Tribune analysis found that of the 108 Minnesota agencies whose
camera policies were publicly available, eight had separate guidelines for officers who
have had discipline issues.
Those agencies are Fairmont, Faribault, Maplewood, St. Paul Park and White Bear Lake
police, and the Anoka, Olmsted and Rice county sheriff s offices.
The use of body cameras has caught on in a big way across the country in recent years,
as officials have come under increasing pressure to hold police accountable after a series
of high profile killings of citizens that sparked protests nationwide. But while the
recording devices have helped document misconduct in places such as Minneapolis and
Baltimore, there are no national standards governing how or when the cameras should
be activated and who should have access to footage.
In Minnesota, as in many states, local jurisdictions are largely allowed to set their own
rules.
A key term frequently used for rules governing dishonest or problematic officers is
"Giglio/Brady," referencing two U.S. Supreme Court cases: Brady v. Maryland and Giglio
vs. United States. The cases determined that prosecutors must disclose all evidence, even
evidence that aids a defendant, to guarantee the constitutional right to a fair trial. That
includes evidence of potential dishonesty by a law enforcement officer.
A draft policy for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, one of several state
law enforcement agencies that recently announced plans to start using body cameras,
requires its conservation officers to record most public encounters, but has no separate
requirement for officers who are deemed less credible, or "Giglio -impaired." Neither do
the state's largest police departments, Minneapolis and St. Paul, which in recent years
have bought more recording devices and strengthened rules on their use.
When Maplewood police began using the cameras in 2016, the first officers to be
assigned the devices were those with credibility issues, said Paul Schnell, the police chief
at the time. In creating its camera policy, Schnell, who retired from the department in
MARK VANCLEAVE. STAR TRIBUNE
A body camera displayed by Ramsey County
Sheriff Bob Fletcher in 2019.
2017 and is now commissioner of the state Department of Corrections, said officials saw
the need for safeguards for officers with a history of lying on the stand and other
credibility issues.
"How do we protect the interests of our investigations, our cases, and really bolster
officers who have Brady status?" he said of Maplewood's camera policy.
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The department's policy led to a lawsuit by the city's police union, which argued that it
should have been crafted through collective bargaining.
Schnell said the department reviewed best practices found in other places, as well as the
League of Minnesota's model policy, which recommended that cities should "allow for
the issuance of special instructions on (body camera) use to officers deemed to be Giglio -
impaired."
Maplewood police Lt. Mike Dugas, who runs the department's professional standards
unit, said its camera policy was crafted based on recommendations from the Minnesota
Chiefs of Police Association, International Association of Chiefs of Police and policy -
writing services, such as Lexipol.
"Our intention was that we didn't want to have any questions regarding those officers'
actions, and we wanted to ensure that cases those officers were involved in were
completely captured on video, to ensure that there was no question if any of those cases
went to trial," Dugas said.
Former Hennepin County chief public defender Mary Moriarty said prosecutors are
supposed to maintain lists of officers who have been flagged as unreliable witnesses,
which under federal law they must turn over to the defense before trial, along with other
evidence that could weaken their case. And while it makes sense that officers on those
lists should face extra scrutiny, Moriarty said, it also points to the bigger questions
about the country's justice system.
"If an officer has been found to have lied under oath, why is that person employed, why
is that case charged in the first place?" said Moriarty, who is running for Hennepin
County attorney to replace the retiring Mike Freeman. "Who would ever want to call a
cop who has been found to have lied to a judge?"
A recent survey of more than 200 Minnesota police chiefs found that while the vast
majority supported the use of body cameras, most — particularly of smaller, outstate
departments — hadn't adopted the technology, citing the high cost: not only for
equipment and data storage, but also for comprehensive audits, which are required
under state law.
The survey by the Minnesota Chiefs of Police Association found that the number of
agencies using the technology had nearly doubled since a similar audit five years ago.
Jeff Potts, the statewide group's executive director, said that as the cameras have become
more widely adopted, departments have imposed tighter rules giving officers less
discretion about when to record their encounters with the public.
For instance, he said, Minneapolis requires officers to switch on their recording devices
well before arriving on the scene of an emergency. New technology also allows cameras
to be turned on automatically as soon as, say, an officer activates the emergency lights
on a police squad car.
"So the need to create carveouts and provisions went away when everybody was subject
to the same policy," said Potts, the former chief of police in Bloomington. "It doesn't
really matter if you're Brady -impaired or not, you're still going to have to have the
cameras on whenever you're interacting with the public or not."
During the 2021 legislative session, a measure that would have provided annual funding
for agencies to buy body cameras was left out of the final $2.6 billion public safety bill.
Rachel Carlson, loss control manager for the League of Minnesota Cities, said the model
policy was not binding but meant to offer advice to police chiefs from smaller, rural
agencies who couldn't necessarily afford to buy cameras for all of their officers. But,
with the technology becoming more commonplace, that concern has also become a
"moot point," she said.
"Some of the smaller chiefs were saying, 'Well I don't have the money to buy cameras for
all 20 of my officers, if I had a Brady -Giglio officer who's been having some problems,
what if I buy a camera just for them?"' Carlson said. "I could speculate that some
agencies didn't feel as though they needed it, maybe they didn't have Brady -Giglio
officers, maybe they felt that their oversight was enough."
Libor Jany is the Minneapolis crime reporter for the Star Tribune. He joined the newspaper in 2013, after
stints in newsrooms in Connecticut, New Jersey, California and Mississippi. He spent his first year
working out of the paper's Washington County bureau, focusing on transportation and education issues,
before moving to the Dakota County team.
libor.jany@startribune.com 612-673-4064 StribJany