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Union County to Become First in NJ to Have All Law Enforcements Equipped with Body-Cameras

Union County

Following months of planning, Union County is poised to become the first county in New Jersey that is exclusively patrolled by local law enforcement to have all of its departments outfitted with body-worn cameras, acting Union County Prosecutor Michael A. Monahan announced Thursday.

Prosecutor Monahan, who earlier this year launched an initiative to ensure full countywide implementation, was joined today by county officials and most of Union County’s 21 municipal police chiefs at the Andrew K. Ruotolo Justice Center in downtown Elizabeth to mark the occasion.

“I am confident there will come a time when body-worn cameras are as commonplace as any other item in a police officer’s toolkit,” Prosecutor Monahan said. “But for now, we can be satisfied in the knowledge that Union County, on the issue of body-worn cameras, is at the vanguard among law enforcement in New Jersey, progressively ahead of the curve and leading the way. And for that, I thank our chiefs for their commitment to delivering transparency, accountability, and professionalism to the public.”  

“Vehicle video systems have been available for law enforcement for decades, but body-worn cameras are a vast improvement because they allow you to see incidents unfold from the officers’ actual point of view. They have become a valued tool in daily use not only for officers’ protection, but the protection of the citizenry as well,” added Springfield Police Chief John Cook, President of the Union County Police Chiefs Association.

“The body-worn camera gives a true account of events, and may even reveal evidence that was not initially seen.”

The Prosecutor’s Office distributed approximately $181,000 of its forfeiture funds to six municipal police departments in 2018 to cover significant shares of their first-year startup costs for their body-worn cameras, ancillary equipment, and file storage. All of those departments are currently in various active stages of body-worn camera deployment, a process anticipated to be completed early in 2019.

Thursday’s announcement comes a little more than three years after the Prosecutor’s Office launched what to that point was New Jersey’s largest county-funded, multi-municipality body-worn camera pilot program of its kind, with nine departments signing up for the initial rollout in late 2015. The remaining departments in Union County independently implemented body-worn cameras at various points during the next several years.

The New Jersey Attorney General’s Office awarded 15 police departments in Union County a total of $376,500 to purchase body-worn cameras as part of past funding programs that offered over $3 million to police agencies across the state to acquire the devices.

“I share a firm commitment with law enforcement across New Jersey to fostering stronger police-community relations through increased transparency and accountability,” said Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal. “Body-worn cameras are an important tool for promoting confidence in our police officers by holding them accountable, while also protecting them from unfounded complaints and helping them gather evidence.  I applaud Prosecutor Monahan and leaders throughout Union County for recognizing that these devices make officers more effective and enhance the safety of the public and police alike.”  

The first directive issued by Attorney General Grewal after taking office established a policy that made body- and dash-camera videos of police deadly force incidents 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.  

The body-worn cameras used by patrol officers throughout Union County are activated at the start of calls for service –  officer safety permitting – and during any on-duty encounter with a civilian, with several exceptions for certain situations and in sensitive venues such as schools or houses of worship. Circumstances in which the cameras are in use include traffic stops, vehicle searches, arrests, and more.

During the course of each workday, officers also “tag” their videos electronically, filing them into different categories, and this can be accomplished using a variety of devices, from smart phones to laptops. Once each officer returns to police headquarters following a shift, he or she removes their camera and places it in a docking station; at that point the footage is uploaded to cloud storage or local servers while the device also recharges automatically.

“Among our Board of Chosen Freeholders’ ‘Moving Union County Forward’ priorities announced at the start of this year, public safety was central among them, and Prosecutor Monahan and our police chiefs working together to achieve full, countywide implementation of body-worn cameras is something that will make public life safer not only for our brave men and women in law enforcement, but also the many citizens they interact with every day,” Chairman Granados said. “And furthermore, it marks another step toward ensuring that transparency and accountability in Union County are more than just words, but ideals, backed up by action.”

Prosecutor Monahan thanked all of the municipal elected officials who approved funding for future body-worn camera costs, as well as all of the local chiefs – including Union County Police Chief Chris Debbie, Union County Public Safety Director Andrew Moran, Union County Sheriff Peter Corvelli, Berkeley Heights Police Chief John DiPasquale, Clark Police Chief Pedro Matos, Cranford Police Chief Ryan Greco, Elizabeth Police Chief John Brennan and Public Safety Director James Cosgrove, Fanwood Police Chief Richard Trigo, Garwood Police Chief James Wright, Hillside Police Chief Vincent Ricciardi, Kean University Police Director Mark Farsi, Kenilworth Police Chief John Zimmerman, Linden Police Chief David Hart, Mountainside Police Officer-in-Charge Joseph Giannuzzi, New Providence Police Chief Anthony Buccelli Jr., Plainfield Police Director Carl Riley, Rahway Police Chief John Rodger, Roselle Police Chief Brian Barnes, Roselle Park Police Chief Paul Morrison, Scotch Plains Police Chief Theodore Conley, Springfield Police Chief John Cook, Summit Police Chief Robert Weck, Westfield Police Chief Christopher Battiloro, Winfield Police Chief Walter Berg, and Union Township Police Director Daniel Zieser.

The New Jersey Office of the Attorney General in July 2015 issued a 24-page directive governing the use of body-worn cameras by law enforcement statewide.

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