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Watch: New tasers could mean frontline police will wear body cameras

Author
Cheree Kinnear, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 6 Jun 2023, 7:25am

Watch: New tasers could mean frontline police will wear body cameras

Author
Cheree Kinnear, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 6 Jun 2023, 7:25am

Watch full story above

Frontline police could soon wear body cameras as the updating of their taser fleet triggers discussions at the top.

Police have confirmed the decision to proceed with updating the current taser fleet from late 2023, but the聽Herald聽understands the model being considered doesn鈥檛 have a built-in camera - unlike the current ones being used.

It would mean the 鈥渕oral agreement鈥 between the police, the Government and the public is lost.

鈥淭heir agreement currently is that they will have to have cameras on their tasers, so they have to look to a solution,鈥 Police Association president Chris Cahill told Focus.

鈥淚 understand one clear solution is tasers combined with body cameras, and that it can activate when you draw the taser.鈥

It鈥檚 understood police are considering the latest model from Axon - the Taser 10.

A Newmarket Security guard wears a bodycam. Photo / Jed Bradley

A Newmarket Security guard wears a bodycam. Photo / Jed Bradley

Police have been using tasers from the US tech company for about 15 years.

As outlined on Axon鈥檚 website, the new model has a 10-probe capacity and a maximum range of 45 feet (13.7m). With no built-in camera, they instead connect automatically to Axon body-worn cameras as well as in-car cameras.

In a statement to Focus, police refused to confirm these details, stating only that 鈥渢here was still significant work to be done on what this would look like鈥.

On the use of body-worn cameras, they said it 鈥渞emained an issue they were considering as part of wider ongoing work鈥.

Police have only ever gone as far as a draft review in 2019 when a proposed trial of body-worn cameras was supposed to go ahead in Lower Hutt. But the trial was quietly shelved for reasons unknown.

Axon's Taser 10. Photo / Axon

Axon's Taser 10. Photo / Axon

This came despite significant interest from Police Association members as well as calls from the public for their introduction.

鈥淭he issues with body cameras is obviously something that鈥檚 that鈥檚 been around for a long time,鈥 Cahill said.

鈥淭here鈥檚 been many calls from a variety of groups and we鈥檙e certainly not opposed to that. We think, overall, people film everything anyway and so body cameras allow the full story to be told rather than snippets that suit a particular angle that someone might want to take.鈥

Should body-worn cameras be introduced, there would be significant hurdles.

Cost-wise, each camera is more than $1000, not to mention the expense of storing the data. Then there鈥檚 the issue of privacy and who would be allowed access to the footage.

Security guards in Newmarket have showcased how it could work, as they were recently kitted out with the technology.

It came alongside a $500,000 investment into security measures for the area.

鈥淸The cameras] actually act as a de-escalation point,鈥 Mark Knoff-Thomas, of the Newmarket Business Association, said. 鈥淪o once somebody sees that the camera says 鈥榶ou鈥檙e being recorded audio and visual鈥 they might calm down and go 鈥榦kay, cool, maybe I won鈥檛 go crazy after all.

鈥淪o if a situation happens, they鈥檙e able to tap a button, activate the camera to record what is happening then and there.鈥

Before any taser replacement, there would be public consultation, police said.

Watch full story above

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