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Body-Worn Cams: Making Sure You Get the Video

Many of the most innovative features on the current generation of law enforcement body-worn camera systems are all about ensuring the evidence is captured as accurately as possible, that it can be integrated with other video capture systems, and it can be redacted.

David Griffith 2017 Headshot

The idea of outfitting law enforcement officers with cameras to capture evidence of crimes is probably first found in some science fiction story that was published before World War II. Much of contemporary technology was envisioned in such volumes long ago. But the equipment has only been practical for about a decade.

In that decade, the cameras systems, the memory components, the batteries, and the software for managing the evidence they capture have become exponentially more sophisticated. The body-worn cameras of 2016 are much more capable than the systems of five years ago. And with more and more companies scrambling for a piece of the market and seeking to meet the demands of American law enforcement agencies, we're going to see a wide variety of new features and capabilities in these systems in the near future.

Currently, just about every major American law enforcement agency that doesn't equip its officers with cameras is looking into the feasibility of doing so. It used to be that the major selling point for body-worn cameras was the ability to reduce liability in cases where false accusations were levied against officers. Now, in the age of Black Lives Matter and the war on police, agencies see a need to document officer actions on video to placate activists and quell unrest. But in order to do so, contemporary law enforcement body-worn camera systems need to have features that facilitate their ability to capture evidence under the most challenging of conditions and to enable agencies to share that evidence with the media without endangering officers or innocents.

That's why many of the most innovative features on the current generation of law enforcement body-worn camera systems are all about ensuring the evidence is captured as accurately as possible, that it can be integrated with other video capture systems to deliver multiple angles of the event, and it can be redacted so that innocent people will not be shown when the video is broadcast or distributed on the Internet.

Camera Activation
One of the earliest concerns about equipping officers with body cameras was how to ensure officers will have the systems running when they are most needed. The fear was that officers would forget to activate the devices under stress.

The original solution to this problem was to make the on-off operation of the camera as simple as possible. Usually the systems are manually activated by pressing or pushing a large button, bar, or switch. But regardless of ease of use, such buttons, bars, and switches require the officer to manually activate them. Agencies needed technology that would automatically turn on the cameras at critical moments.

Automatic triggering of recordings through such events as lightbar activation was for some time one of the advantages that in-car video systems had over body cams. So it was no coincidence that one of the first companies to address this concern was Digital Ally, a maker of both in-car and body-worn video evidence capture tools. Digital Ally's VuLink simultaneously starts a recording on the officer's FirstVu body camera when the in-car system is triggered by stimulus such as G forces, vehicle speed, or lightbar activation. Other companies have since added similar hands-free activation to their product lines.

One of the most unusual innovations in hands-free activation debuted in January at the SHOT Show. Vievu, recently acquired by Safariland, now offers technology that activates the camera when an officer draws his or her sidearm. This system is in its rudimentary stages of development and requires a special duty belt, but it has promise.

The FirstVu HD from Digital Ally is available in two configurations, a flat box and a 'bullet' shape that can be attached to glasses or epaulettes. Both can be automatically activated using VuLink. Photo: FirstVuThe FirstVu HD from Digital Ally is available in two configurations, a flat box and a "bullet" shape that can be attached to glasses or epaulettes. Both can be automatically activated using VuLink. Photo: FirstVu

Image Quality
Video is useless as evidence if you can't see what happened. Which is why so many law enforcement video manufacturers have stressed the quality of their video capture since the days of VHS. The quality of video that can be captured by small, digital camera systems today is truly impressive.

Most manufacturers of quality body-worn camera systems now offer their customers video quality ranging from 480p SD to 1080p HD at 60 frames. While every agency would like to have the highest resolution video capture possible, the limiting factor is often the cost of storage for the larger HD files.

Often a bigger concern for agencies than the resolution of the video is what can be seen in the frame. This is why companies tout wide-angle systems. Just as important for police operations are night and low-light capabilities. Most systems offer low-light capabilities, some with infrared assist. Kustom Signals even allows configuration of its Vantage system for day/night mode to enhance low-light video performance.

Vievu (Safariland) showed new technology at this year's SHOT Show that activates the officer's camera when he or she draws a tool or weapon from a special duty belt. Photo: VievuVievu (Safariland) showed new technology at this year's SHOT Show that activates the officer's camera when he or she draws a tool or weapon from a special duty belt. Photo: Vievu

Integration with Car Systems
As discussed, Digital Ally was one of the first companies to combine the capabilities of in-car systems with body-worn cameras. At the time, Digital Ally was one of the few companies to make both body-worn and in-car systems. Today, just about every maker of law enforcement video for cars makes a body cam as well.

These companies are now offering synergies between their systems to entice agencies using a particular brand of in-car system to give serious consideration to using the same make of body-worn camera. The systems often integrate video capture as seen with Digital Ally's VuLink, upload either wirelessly or through a dock as with Kustom Signals Vantage, and/or share evidence management as seen with Panasonic's Arbitrator Body Worn Camera and Arbitrator in-car systems, which both use the company's Unified Evidence Management System.

Even TASER International, which makes body cameras but doesn't make in-car systems, is now offering ways to integrate in-car capabilities with its systems. TASER's Evidence.com cloud-based evidence management system has long had the capability to work with a variety of video, including files captured by in-car systems. And this year, TASER began offering a modified version of its Axon camera called the Axon Fleet designed to be used as an in-car system. Axon Fleet features wireless activation from triggers such as the lightbar switch or other sensors, Retina HD video for low-light performance, a rear-facing camera for prisoner surveillance, and wireless upload to Evidence.com, so the camera doesn't have to be removed from its mount.

Before and After Activation
A problem that was quickly discovered with the earliest analog in-car video systems was that incidents often begin before the video is triggered. Digital in-car video systems were able to address this by adding pre-event recording. And now so are body-worn systems.

A pre-event recording is created in a memory buffer. Basically, this means the camera is always recording the same loop over and over in the same small sector of its memory. When a recording is triggered, it also captures the buffer in the file. For a body-worn camera, this pre-event recording might actually be an attack on the officer, which could be critical in justifying an officer using force on a subject. A variety of body camera makers offer pre-event recording, usually with the buffers capturing from 30 seconds to two minutes of action before the camera was activated.

One of the most innovative features currently available on any in-car or body-worn system is WatchGuard Video's Record After the Fact. This literally means the camera can capture an event, even if the officer never activated the system when it was occurring. Record After the Fact is a feature on WatchGuard's 4RE in-car systems and Vista body cams, and it can literally capture an event more than a day after it happened. The technology works sort of like pre-event recording. The camera is always recording, except unlike pre-event recording, it actually writes the data to the memory, which means as long as the memory is not overwritten, the data can be recovered using WatchGuard's software.

Protecting the Innocent
Perhaps the most in-demand feature for law enforcement body-worn video systems is some form of automated redaction. The need for this capability is easily understood. Agencies are sending their officers out on the street capturing video, and when incidents happen, that video becomes evidence—and in some states public record—that must be released on demand. There are often minors, crime victims, witnesses, and even undercover officers whose identities must be protected on these videos, which means someone will have to go in and redact the video.

Video editors, even those with elementary skills, are expensive. So body-worn camera customers have been asking manufacturers for automated redaction features in the evidence management software of their body-worn camera systems. Numerous companies, including TASER, Digital Ally, Vievu, and Utility now offer this feature.

Kustom Signals' Vantage body-worn camera can upload files wirelessly to the company's Eyewitness in-car system so that officers don't have to turn in their cameras at the end of their shifts. Photo: Kustom SignalKustom Signals' Vantage body-worn camera can upload files wirelessly to the company's Eyewitness in-car system so that officers don't have to turn in their cameras at the end of their shifts. Photo: Kustom Signal

Automatic redaction of video speeds up the process of editing 30 or 60 frames a second into a simple point-and-click operation that an officer or trusted civilian employee can be trained to perform in a few hours. Using the software, the viewer can mark a target such as an object or person and the software will track the target throughout the video and blur it using a variety of techniques. Only a copy of the video is redacted. The original evidentiary file is not changed in the process.

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