When San Francisco police raided journalist Bryan Carmody's home last year, in a misguided search attempting to track down a leaker, none of the event was captured on police body camera.
A newly released memo reveals that a lieutenant with the investigative services detail specifically told police at the scene, following a captain's orders, that officers were not to use their body cameras for the operation.
Instead, a spokesperson for the San Francisco Police Department told the organization he couldn't provide any more detail because of "Pending administrative investigations."
SFPD officers searched Carmody's home in May 2019 because they were trying to track down who had leaked to him a police report with embarrassing details surrounding the death of San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi.
Because of the contentious relationship between Adachi and the police department, it's possible that somebody within the police department might have leaked the report to posthumously make Adachi look bad. California has shield laws protecting journalists from being forced to reveal confidential sources.
Body cameras, when properly and carefully implemented, are helpful tools for police transparency and accountability.
Sometimes officers individually decide to turn them off, but here we see leaders purposefully ordering police not to record an investigation.
A newly released memo reveals that a lieutenant with the investigative services detail specifically told police at the scene, following a captain's orders, that officers were not to use their body cameras for the operation.
Instead, a spokesperson for the San Francisco Police Department told the organization he couldn't provide any more detail because of "Pending administrative investigations."
SFPD officers searched Carmody's home in May 2019 because they were trying to track down who had leaked to him a police report with embarrassing details surrounding the death of San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi.
Because of the contentious relationship between Adachi and the police department, it's possible that somebody within the police department might have leaked the report to posthumously make Adachi look bad. California has shield laws protecting journalists from being forced to reveal confidential sources.
Body cameras, when properly and carefully implemented, are helpful tools for police transparency and accountability.
Sometimes officers individually decide to turn them off, but here we see leaders purposefully ordering police not to record an investigation.
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