PENNINGTON, HOPEWELL TWP.: Grants will help fund police body cameras

By Philip Sean Curran, Staff Writer
Hopewell Township and Pennington are two nine police departments in Mercer County to receive state grant money to outfit their officers with body cameras.
Across the state 176 police departments, county sheriff’s offices and the Rutgers Police Department shared around $2.5 million to buy the equipment. Those agencies had to apply for a grant through their respective county prosecutor’s office; the money does not cover costs related to storing the video footage.
Hopewell Township will receive $14,000 for 28 cameras, and Pennington $2,500 for five.
Elsewhere, East Windsor received $15,000 for 30 cameras; Ewing, $17,500 for 35; Hamilton, $60,000 for 120; Lawrence, $12,000 for 24; Princeton, $15,000 for 30, and Robbinsville, $14,500 for 29.
Acting-Mercer County Prosecutor Angelo J. Onofri said Dec. 22 that most departments intend to have them in use by June.
Princeton police Chief Nicholas K. Sutter said at the Princeton Council meeting on Monday that the New Jersey State Police are implementing testing of 100 cameras. In doing so, that will give departments like his a chance to learn from the larger agency’s experience.
“That’s going to give us a good sample of how these things work,” he said. “And I’m sure there’s going to be some policy development and technology development that comes out of that.”
The state Attorney General’s office said roughly 50 law enforcement departments in the state already have body cameras, of which 31 received a state grant to buy more of them. That meant 145 agencies got grants to buy them for the first time.
The state office estimated the new grants will bring to about 208 of the roughly 500 different police agencies in the state that either are or will be equipped with the technology.
“We clearly are leading the nation when it comes to our efforts in New Jersey to deploy body-worn cameras to promote transparency and mutual accountability of police and civilians,” Acting Attorney General John J. Hoffman said in a news release.
The push to have police wearing cameras picked up momentum in the wake of high-profile incidents, including the police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
In July, Mr. Hoffman issued law enforcement agencies a directive containing guidelines for the use of body-worn cameras. He said police departments are not required to have them, but he sought to make the case for why they make sense.
“It is widely recognized that BWCs can play an important role in addressing public concerns about police use of force,” he wrote. “A BWC recording of a police-involved shooting or other use-of-force event provides objective evidence of what occurred. The practical utility of BWCs, however, lies not only in their ability to record objectively the circumstances of a police-civilian confrontation, but also in their capacity to discourage both officers and civilians from engaging in inappropriate conduct.”
Echoing those thoughts, Mr. Onofri said he hoped the cameras bring more accountability not only for police but for the public as well. He said police departments in New Jersey that use them have seen a “drastic drop” in internal affairs complaints.
Each police department will have to craft its own procedures for body cameras within the guidelines Mr. Hoffman issued in July, Mr. Onofri said.
The chief law enforcement officer of each agency is responsible for deciding which officers wear the devices, Mr. Hoffman told departments in July. They have to provide their officers with training on them, and the cameras only can be used during official police duties.
Officers have to turn on the devices when they are making an arrest and in other situations outlined in his directive, as soon as it is “safe and practicable to do so.”
The video footage can be used in the criminal prosecution of someone in court, Mr. Onofri said. 