Everyday Injustice Podcast Episode 197: Police Agencies Avoid Accountability with Shooting Footage

Published: April 24, 2023, 10:32 a.m.

b'In 2018, California passed a lass that mandated police departments to release body camera footage within 45 days of any incident when an officer fires a gun, or uses force that leads to great bodily injury or death.\\n\\nHowever, a CalMatters investigative report found that agencies rarely release the raw footage to the public.\\n\\nInstead, CalMatters reported \\u201cthe public and the media must rely on edited presentations that often include a highlighted or circled object in a person\\u2019s hand, slowed-down video to show the moments when the person may have pointed the object at police and transcriptions of the body camera\\u2019s audio.\\u201d\\n\\n\\u201cTo only release an edited version is not what we think is called for from the defendant\\u2019s point of view,\\u201d said Stephen Munkelt, executive director of California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, a Sacramento-based association of criminal defense attorneys. \\u201cIf they\\u2019re editing things out, it\\u2019s probably the stuff that\\u2019s beneficial to the defendant.\\u201d\\n\\nCalMatters reported, \\u201cHe also worries about the impact of the release of the body camera footage on a potential jury pool. Still, Munkelt said, some video is better than none, if only because defense attorneys have more grounds to ask a judge for the full, unedited video.\\u201d\\n\\nThis week on Everyday Injustice, Stephen Munkelt joins us and discusses police body worn camera footage and the state of the law.'