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AG Office Announces Results of New Survey of NJ Law Enforcement Use of Body-Worn Cameras

Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal announced the results of a statewide survey of New Jersey’s law enforcement agencies that revealed that 239 of the 537 agencies surveyed now equip some or all of their officers with body-worn cameras.

The survey conducted by the Attorney General’s Office includes state, county, and local law enforcement agencies, as well as college campus police, a school district police department, and bridge police. It does not include federal agencies.

The 239 agencies with body-worn cameras have a total of 12,195 cameras. The survey represents a snapshot of body-worn cameras owned as of September 23. It does not include cameras that are in the process of being acquired by law enforcement agencies.

The New Jersey State Police recently completed the process of outfitting all State Troopers on road patrol with body-worn cameras.

Of the four State Police patrol units, Troop A, Troop B, and Troop C were fully outfitted with body-worn cameras by the start of July 2020. Troop D was fully outfitted with body-worn cameras by the end of August.

The survey indicates that the number of law enforcement agencies with body-worn cameras is approaching half of the agencies in the state— specifically, approximately 45 percent of the total number of agencies.

To see the full survey results click [**HERE**](https://www.nj.gov/oag/newsreleases20/2020-BWC-Survey_FULL.pdf).

Attorney General Grewal has said that he supports the use of body-worn cameras, but cannot mandate their statewide use unless the Legislature appropriates sufficient, reliable funding to help local police departments purchase and maintain these systems.

The Attorney Generals office has said that Police departments are welcome—and encouraged—to purchase their own body-worn camera systems if they are in a position to do so, in order to promote accountability and strengthen police-community relations.

A 2017 survey of police officers using body-worn cameras in New Jersey indicated that most were highly satisfied with the devices and viewed them as effective tools for promoting public trust, protecting officers, and gathering evidence.

“I applaud the many police departments that have embraced body-worn cameras as a critical tool for enhancing police-community relations, and I urge more to follow suit,” Attorney General Grewal said. “The need for accountability and transparency has never been greater, as we strive to build stronger trust between police officers and the communities they serve.”

In 2015, New Jersey implemented a [**statewide policy**](http://www.nj.gov/oag/dcj/agguide/directives/2015-1_BWC.pdf) governing the use of body-worn cameras by police departments that elect to deploy them:

Since then, Attorney General Grewal has advocated for greater transparency with respect to video footage of police use-of-force incidents.

Shortly after taking office in 2018, he issued AG Directive 2018-1, which established a policy that body- and dash-camera videos of police deadly force incidents are subject to public release, following a formal request, once the initial investigation of the incident is substantially complete, typically within 20 days of the incident.

Attorney General Grewal enhanced that policy in December 2019, as part of his Excellence in Policing Initiative by issuing the Independent Prosecutor Directive (AG Directive 2019-4,), which lays out a comprehensive process for the independent investigation of police use-of-force and death-in-custody incidents.

New disclosure rules in that directive include the release of any third-party footage captured by surveillance cameras or a civilian’s smartphone and later obtained by law enforcement during the investigation.

Working with law enforcement statewide and community stakeholders, Attorney General Grewal has implemented some of the most ambitious and progressive policing reforms in the country:

- Mandating implicit bias training for all prosecutors, state and county detectives, and state troopers.

- Creating a statewide Conviction Review Unit.

- Launching a first-in-the-nation statewide officer resiliency program.

- Banning chokeholds except in the most limited circumstances.

- Holding regular community listening sessions in all 21 counties in New Jersey.

- Overhauling the state’s police training programs.

- Building a statewide use-of-force database.

Attorney General Grewal is also undertaking a substantial rewrite of the state’s use of force policy – the first rewrite of the policy in 20 years – incorporating feedback from public listening sessions held earlier this summer.

The revised policy is expected to be completed by the end of the year.

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