Crime & Safety
Top Cops Propose Accountability, But Seek Limits on Body-Cam Video
Sheriff says police, not politicians, should lead efforts to restore public trust in officers, who face "constant berating."

Many of their βPolice 2.0β proposals unveiled during National Police Week call for increased accountability, but a trio of metro Detroit sheriffs think police body- and dash-cam video exposes police to mockery in βcheap reality TVβ programs easily created by anyone with an Internet connection. (Photo via Creative Commons)
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Metro Detroit sheriffs are appealing to state and federal politicians to stop βpepperingβ local law enforcement with proposals to improve community relations, and instead talk to them about reform efforts needed to ease growing tensions between police and the public.
βLaw enforcement has been very much pounded lately,β Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said Tuesday during a National Police Week news conference, where he outlined βPolicing 2.0β proposals that would put police agencies in the driverβs seat of reform efforts.
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Joining him were Macomb County Sheriff Anthony Wickersham and Wayne County Undersheriff Daniel Pfannes, according to reports by the Detroit Free Press, Oakland County Press and Michigan Radio.
βIβm frustrated by the constant peppering of law enforcement from both the Far Right and the Far Left,β Bouchard said. βThe Far Right seems to think weβre part of the NSA, and the Far Left wants to disarm us.β
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Bouchard said he and other sheriffs are left out of discussions among politicians who βdonβt talk to us,β but respond with knee-jerk proposals. βConstant berating in the mediaβ is causing morale among police officers to sink, he said.
The 2.0 proposals, which Bouchard and his staff have floated from Lansing to Capitol Hill to the White House, create a system of tougher accountability, but retain local control β important, the Oakland sheriff says, because eliminating a layer of bureaucracy increases transparency
They would mandate, among other things, a centralized reporting system fo all officer-involved shootings and in-custody deaths, as well as incidents involving the use of force β including a stun gun, firearm or other restraint equipment β overcome suspects who are resisting arrest.
βIβm not talking about somebody resisting being handcuffed but active force,β Bouchard said.
- See also: βRobocopβ Accused of Severely Beating Black Man in Traffic Stop Has Notorious Historyβ
The sheriffs also back a $50 million statewide training program, including better training for reserve and auxiliary officers under a system with uniform state standards. Local departments currently set their own standards for reserve officers, and many small departments have been criticized for deputizing untrained outsiders, Bouchard said.
- See also: Kid Rockβs a Cop. No, Really,
To restore public trust in police officers, property seized under state and federal asset confiscation laws would be subjected to increased reporting standards.
Those proposals all increase the amount of information the public could access about police conduct. But Bouchard and the other law enforcement brass also seek limits on the the release of video from body-worn police cameras under the Freedom of Information Act β unless it relates to a citizen-filed complaint.
Bouchard reasoned that if videos were available to any citizen requesting them, they could be used by anyone with an Internet connection to create a βcheap reality TV show at the expense of the public we serve.β
Michigan ACLU legislative director Shelli Weisberg told the Free Press civil libertarians welcome Bouchardβs call for increased reporting and accountability on forfeitures, but took issue with his call restrict access to video from body cameras.
βYou canβt increase community trust out of one side of your mouth if out of the other side of your mouth, you say you want to keep video away from the public,β Weisberg said.
The proposals come as activists march on urban streets across the nation to protest the high profile deaths of of several unarmed black men.
- See also: Police: ICE Agent Fired Multiple Shots in Killing of Man Armed with Hammer | ICE Agentβs Attorney Defends Shooting; County Withholds Autopsy Report | ICE Agent Who Shot Suspect Goes Into Hiding
Todayβs police officers work in an environment that Bouchard said is unique in his 29 years of law enforcement.
Police officers are under such constant attack by the public and media, he said, that the βfeel like theyβre the Vietnam vetsβ of the 1970.β
βThey feel like theyβre putting their lives on the line, and feel beaten up and under appreciated,β he said.
- Tell Us: What do you think about these proposals? What other reform is necessary?
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