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DOJ requests body cameras for Portland police officers

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — The U.S. Department of Justice has issued a new list of requests from the Portland Police Bureau amid an ongoing back-and-forth between federal officials and the City of Portland surrounding a joint settlement agreement.

Among the nine requests, which were discussed Tuesday, according to a spokesperson for Mayor Ted Wheeler, was the request for the city to implement a body-worn camera program for all officers.

The full list of requests, which involves various items involving looking at officers’ use of force, training, holding officers accountable, and community engagement, stems from a 2014 settlement agreement which the DOJ found the bureau was no longer in compliance with due to use of force at protests in 2020. A city spokesperson said the city is giving serious consideration to the suggested remedies.

Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty has spoken out against body cameras in the past, saying they’re expensive and there has been “inconclusive evidence that they provide police accountability and reduce police use of force.”

Hardesty said she couldn’t currently comment on the details because of the ongoing bargaining between the City of Portland and the police union, Portland Police Association, but on Twitter said, “I have been researching the issue and now believe there is new technology, policies, and additional best practices to draw from that can lead to a body camera program that produces better outcomes in policing, but the devil is in the details.”

In a statement to KOIN 6 News, police union leader Daryl Turner said, “The Portland Police Association has voiced their support for body worn cameras not only as an accountability measure but also to document the outstanding work that Portland Police Officers do every day.”

The attorney for Elijah Warren, a Black Portlander who is suing the city after he said he was beaten by an officer outside of his after being mistaken for a rioter on the 100th night of protests in the city last year, said he’s in favor of body cameras and thinks it would have helped his client.

“If the police are being recorded in their interactions with people, they are more likely to behave properly and second, if they behave improperly, there’s a permanent record,” attorney Greg Kafoury said, adding, “and that can be used for accountability.”

The full list of requirments is below: