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San Diego Police Adjust Body Camera Usage Policy Following Unrecorded Shooting

Zimmerman said at a news conference on Thursday in front of police headquarters that officers will be told to turn the recording on before they arrive at calls that “are likely to result in enforcement contact.”

The San Diego Police Department will begin training officers to activate body-worn cameras earlier in the process of responding to calls, Chief Shelley Zimmerman announced Thursday.

The new orders are a subtle but potentially important change in how the cameras are used, and comes one week after the fatal shooting of a man in the Midway District by an officer whose camera was not recording.

Previously, officers were trained to turn the device on when they interacted with someone in what the camera policy described as an “enforcement related contact.”

Zimmerman said at a news conference on Thursday in front of police headquarters that officers will be told to turn the recording on before they arrive at calls that “are likely to result in enforcement contact.”

Rawshannehad was shot in an alley off Hancock Street by a veteran officer on April 30. Browder had been dispatched after 911 calls reported a man with a knife threatening people in the area, and the encounter with Rawshannehad was not recorded on his body-mounted camera, U-T San Diego reports.

Some 600 officers have been issued cameras in the Central, Mid-City, Southeastern, Western, Northern and Southern divisions as well as the Gang Suppression Unit.

Another 400 are planned to be purchased in the upcoming year for the Traffic, Eastern and Northern divisions. The units cost $299 or $499 depending on the model, according to the 2014 contract between the city and the Taser corporation, which sells the cameras.

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