The West Hollywood Sheriff’s Station will be one of five where deputies will begin wearing body cameras beginning Oct. 1.
The L.A. County Sheriff’s Department today announced the launch of the body camera program in West Hollywood and also at its stations in Lancaster, Century, Lakewood, and Industry. The Sheriff’s Department has contracted with Axon Enterprise Inc. to provide the cameras.
“This was a 20-month battle since the very first week I took office to get this program up and running, and it is very important to transparency (and) my commitment to reform the department,” said L.A. County Sheriff Alex Villanueva.
“In today’s climate, where everyone is doubting the product of law enforcement, I can say honestly, that with the body-worn cameras, the public themselves can see that what deputies are saying and doing in the field matches what they’re seeing on video. That has been the experience of all agencies with body-worn cameras, because by and large, deputies, police officers everywhere are doing the right thing for the right reasons, and sometimes under very trying circumstances, dangerous circumstances, where lives are at stake.”
“This is a big step forward for transparency for the Sheriff’s Department and for the community as well,” Villanueva said, adding that he thought it would help restore any “loss of trust that any members of the community may experience with the Sheriff’s department.”
In June, the Office of Inspector General announced that the LASD would roll out the cameras at the end of the third quarter — five years after the LAPD initiated its own program.
“LASD has lagged far behind other major police agencies in the incorporation of video technology as a means for police supervision and public accountability,” a report by Inspector General Max Huntsman stated. “This step forward, slow as it is, is historic.”
The sheriff has blamed his predecessors and the Board of Supervisors for the delay, saying in June that body cameras have been his priority since day one.
“The previous administration had five years … of wasted time, wasted opportunities and four different plans, four different studies and nothing ever came to fruition,” the sheriff said. “Within that first week, we had a plan … it was delivered to the board in December of 2018, and this is where the wheels fall off the wagon.”
Yet another study was requested, he said, accusing the board of intentionally dragging its feet to prohibit him from getting a “win.” The board and the sheriff have wrangled in court and elsewhere over a host of issues, including rehiring deputies terminated for misconduct and failing to turn over documents requested by the Office of the Inspector General.
A pilot program for the Sheriff’s Department was launched in 2014, but plans for a broader roll-out seemed to stall under the weight of questions about when and how to release recordings to deputies and the public, as well as how to pay for storing and managing extensive amounts of data.
20 years LATE.
There is a clear reason why they dragged their feet and we all know why.
well don’t leave us hanging, tell us why.
WeHo City Council Council has relevant & clearly understood standards & protocols for all 3rd party vendors, coupled w/strict compliance & governance measures, oversight, penalties/fines . No? All stakeholder-facing City representatives must pass annual Anti-Corruption, Sexual Harassment, and Anti-Discrimination training. No?
What good are body cameras when they conveniently break down or are outright turned off when most needed. Body cameras should come with the policy of – officers that turn off their cameras are terminated.
About time.
Better late than never.
I’ll be curious to see how quick Sheriff Villanueva is to release body-cam footage that is not flattering to his department, given his indefensible foot dragging in releasing video related to the shooting death of Andres Guardado by a LASD deputy.
Exactly! He’s got to GO!