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There are also particular laws. So, in Minnesota, for example, the police in the city there cited a law that, when I looked into it, had been in its final form written by three legislators who had previously been police officers. So legislators and the law plays a part in this as well.

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The use of police body cameras has become much more widespread in recent years with the hope that they will curb police violence and improve accountability. But a new investigation by ProPublica and The New York Times Magazine found it can often take months or years before the video is released, if at all. William Brangham discussed more with Eric Umansky of ProPublica.

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Three years before Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd, supervisors had watched the footage. They were the only ones who watched the footage, because the police had refused to release anything, and actually refused to release it even years after George Floyd's murder. So it only came out after a judge ordered them to do so in a lawsuit.

Well, so it's — the example that I get into in the most depth in my story was actually the first police killing in New York ever captured on a body-worn camera.

And it's a young man named Miguel Richards. It was a tragic and unfortunately all too kind of common incident where somebody was — he was having a mental health crisis and was holding a knife. Police came to his apartment and 15 minutes later he was shot 16 times.

There was no body camera video to help answer that question. Since then, departments across the nation have spent tens of millions of dollars to put small wearable cameras onto police officers. And, in some shootings, they have made a difference, including murder charges in the deaths of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Tyre Nichols in Memphis, and, more recently, Eddie Irizarry in Philadelphia.

In the physical tape era when record also meant overwrite (and therefore erase) record would be warning-coloured: red or orange.

Your report also details how Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who knelt on the neck of George Floyd, which eventually killed him, had done the same thing in many multiple examples prior to that, had been captured on body camera doing that, but that had never come to light.

My question is: What color(s) should this button be to mimic the most common setup in video recording hardware (which I have little experience with)?

And the officers at the scene just didn't wait and fired and killed him. And yet those full facts six years later are only now coming out.

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And you cite many examples of where body camera video comes out much, much later after some tragic encounter, and it often directly contradicts what police said had happened in that moment.

But a new investigation by ProPublica and "The New York Times Magazine" found it can often take months or years before video is released, if it is released at all.

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Viewers will remember the case earlier this year of Tyre Nichols, who was killed in Memphis. This is actually what got me started on the story, is, there was a line in The New York Times about it which noted that officers had noted that their body-worn cameras were on and then proceeded to beat him anyway.

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The promise, as I mentioned, of these cameras was to have this unbiased record of an event, and the belief being that, if police officers knew they would be seen in action, it might curtail bad behavior.

And you think to yourself, well, how could that happen? The answer is that footage in Memphis is exceedingly rarely released. The fact that footage was released in his case was an extraordinary exception.

So, primarily, what you have is the police who have been left in control of the footage. And it's up to police to decide when footage is released, who it is released to, and what is released, whether it's the full footage or only partial footage. And, as you mentioned, what we found is that often footage isn't released at all, and also, when the police themselves are in the sole custody of footage, they have often not acted on it to discipline, punish, or fire officers who do engage in problematic behavior.

This button also serves as the only indicator of whether or not recording is active (since it says "STOP" when it's active and "REC" when it's not).

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The use of police body cameras has become much more widespread in recent years, with the expectation that they will curb police violence and improve accountability.

It does seem like the refusal to release this video, the hesitancy to do so undercuts the entire idea that police officers know that they might be held to account, and thus might act more appropriately.

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Both dark grey and red should be recognizable for stop. REC should def be red. Changing from a circle to square on record would be ideal. Adding a blinking red would also be ideal if you do use any animation. You can safely assume that users will recognize record becomes stop with minimal visual indication, it's a very consistent standard.

The police commissioner at the time basically praised the officers, cited their exemplary restraint. And the NYPD, while it released some footage, didn't release all of the footage. And what all of the footage shows is that the officers' conduct was problematic, that help had been on the way with specialized training, specially trained officers.

I mean, is there any way to know how often demonstrable misconduct is captured on these cameras and then not brought to light?

If the button has text, I think it is big enough to be able to show with some type of animation that there is an action running, without making a big color change. In this way you not only highlight the subtle difference of the button but also the semantic reinforcement of stopping an action: the recording and the animation.

My instinct is that "REC" should be red, but then I am not sure what color "STOP" should be, because I also feel like red would indicate "recording in progress".

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Geoff, back in 2014, there were very differing accounts of what happened when 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot dead by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. Was it justified self-defense or a fatal overreaction?

All right, Eric Umansky, editor in chief at ProPublica, your reporting can be found in "The New York Times Magazine" and ProPublica.org.