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Thread: Body camera catches cop planting drugs at crime scene

  1. #1
    Senior Member Justin's Avatar

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    Body camera catches cop planting drugs at crime scene



    Watch the video at the very beginning, you can see the officer with the plastic bag quickly place it in the soup can (he thought the camera was off at this point). It appears that the other officers were in on this as well.

    Baltimore police and prosecutors have launched investigations after being alerted to body camera footage that the public defender's office says shows an officer planting drugs. The footage is from a January drug arrest. It shows an officer placing a soup can, which holds a plastic bag, into a trash strewn lot. The officer can then be seen walking to the street, where he flips on his body camera. "I'm gonna go check here," the officer says. He returns to the lot and picks up the soup can, removing a plastic bag filled with white capsules. Police cameras have a feature that saves the 30 seconds of video prior to activation, but without audio. When the officer is first in the alley, there is no audio until 30 seconds later. "We take allegations like this very seriously and that's why we launched an internal investigation into the accusations," said Police Department spokesman T.J. Smith. "We are fortunate to have body worn cameras which provide a perspective of the event.”

    The public defender's office flagged the video recently, prompting prosecutors to drop charges against the man arrested and charged for the drugs. He had been in jail since January on a $50,000 bail he was unable to pay, according to attorney Deborah Levi, who is leading a new effort to track police misconduct cases for the public defender's office. Levi said prosecutors just days later called the officer as a witness in another case, without disclosing the allegations to the defense attorney in that case. "You can't try a case with that guy and not tell anyone about it," Levi said. Melba Saunders, a spokeswoman for the Baltimore State's Attorney's Office, said prosecutors are looking into the video, which she called "troubling." Saunders said the prosecutor on the case "took immediate and appropriate actions by dropping the case and alerting his supervisor." "Currently this case is under investigation and has been referred to internal affairs of the Baltimore Police Department," Saunders said.

  2. #2
    Registered User LAGC's Avatar

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    This shit happens way more often than people realize.

    Police bodycams are a good idea in general (to protect the good cops from false allegations of abuse as much as hold the dirty ones to account) but are pretty much useless when the cops can turn them on or off at will.

    With as cheap as compact digital storage media is these days, there's no reason police bodycams can't be ALWAYS ON with no way to turn them off, and swapped out each shift.

    In fact, I've heard of some solutions where the bodycams transmit by radio to a mass storage device securely locked in each police cruiser, that way dirty cops can't tamper with the captured footage either. (Sure, they cost more money, but I think it's still probably a lot cheaper in the long run for police departments to afford than having to pay out wrongful death lawsuits or payouts due to false imprisonment due to falsified/planted evidence, etc...)
    "That tyranny has all the vices both of democracy and oligarchy is evident. As of oligarchy so of tyranny, the end is wealth; (for by wealth only can the tyrant maintain either his guard or his luxury). Both mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of their arms." -- Aristotle, Book V, 350 B.C.E

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    Just run the battery dry? Duh...
    While no one ever listens to me,
    I am constantly being told to be quiet.

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  4. #4
    Registered User LAGC's Avatar

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    Quote Originally Posted by l921428x View Post
    Just run the battery dry? Duh...
    Not if they are swapped out each shift. And regular compliance checks to check for any technical issues.

    There's no reason police departments can't make an "always on" police bodycam regimen work.
    "That tyranny has all the vices both of democracy and oligarchy is evident. As of oligarchy so of tyranny, the end is wealth; (for by wealth only can the tyrant maintain either his guard or his luxury). Both mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of their arms." -- Aristotle, Book V, 350 B.C.E

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    Site Admin & **Team Gunsnet Silver 12/2012** Richard Simmons's Avatar

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    What was the purpose for "planting" drugs in a pile or garbage? Did they charge the empty lot with possession?
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  6. #6
    Senior Member Justin's Avatar

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    A pro-police blog offered another explanation for what happened in this video.

    https://bluelivesmatter.blue/video-b...lanting-drugs/

    "Officers then went to the buy location to try to find where the drug stash was. Officers could be seen on video searching a yard and finding a drug stash.

    The officers then turned off their body cameras off for five minutes and the final video shows the officer “discovering” the drugs that he had placed on the ground. Drugs which appear to be the same drugs found in the yard five minutes prior.

    Based on the other video, we know that both the buyer and seller were found in actual possession of the drugs, and the seller admitted to possession of the drugs. Then when officers went to find the stash, they found the drugs that they were looking for before an officer reset the scene.

    Rather and an officer planting drugs, it now appears that the officer re-staged the scene to fabricate the moment that the drugs were found in order to document it better on camera.

    If that’s the case, then this is falsifying a report, and it’s not good."

    It's not quite as bad as framing an innocent person, but it's still staging the scene of a crime though.

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    Administrator Krupski's Avatar

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    Quote Originally Posted by LAGC View Post
    This shit happens way more often than people realize.

    Police bodycams are a good idea in general (to protect the good cops from false allegations of abuse as much as hold the dirty ones to account) but are pretty much useless when the cops can turn them on or off at will.

    With as cheap as compact digital storage media is these days, there's no reason police bodycams can't be ALWAYS ON with no way to turn them off, and swapped out each shift.

    In fact, I've heard of some solutions where the bodycams transmit by radio to a mass storage device securely locked in each police cruiser, that way dirty cops can't tamper with the captured footage either. (Sure, they cost more money, but I think it's still probably a lot cheaper in the long run for police departments to afford than having to pay out wrongful death lawsuits or payouts due to false imprisonment due to falsified/planted evidence, etc...)

    There can always be an unfortunate splash of mud on the lens or even simpler just turn to the side while doing a dirty deed.

    Big battery and all-day recording is worthless if the camera can't see the crime.

    Try again.
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  8. #8
    Registered User LAGC's Avatar

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    Quote Originally Posted by Krupski View Post
    There can always be an unfortunate splash of mud on the lens or even simpler just turn to the side while doing a dirty deed.

    Big battery and all-day recording is worthless if the camera can't see the crime.
    Well, if that type of thing keeps happening each time there is an accusation of planted evidence or abuse of power, I think the cop in question would have some 'splainin' to do.

    "If it happens once, it's a coincidence. If it keeps happening over and over again, it's a pattern."

    Plus, even if video is obstructed somehow, there would still be audio. Which would at least help with discerning who is telling the truth about human encounters at least.
    "That tyranny has all the vices both of democracy and oligarchy is evident. As of oligarchy so of tyranny, the end is wealth; (for by wealth only can the tyrant maintain either his guard or his luxury). Both mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of their arms." -- Aristotle, Book V, 350 B.C.E

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    Quote Originally Posted by LAGC View Post
    Well, if that type of thing keeps happening each time there is an accusation of planted evidence or abuse of power, I think the cop in question would have some 'splainin' to do.

    "If it happens once, it's a coincidence. If it keeps happening over and over again, it's a pattern."

    Plus, even if video is obstructed somehow, there would still be audio. Which would at least help with discerning who is telling the truth about human encounters at least.
    Doesn't help the first 50...... I'm pro police but I bet that goes on quite a lot especially in big city police dept's

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