A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jan 17, 2016

New York Police Department To Charge TV News $36,000 For Body Cam Footage

The cost of surveillance versus the price of transparency. Society has a stake in both. It will fascinating to see which one the courts and the citizenry consider a higher priority. JL

David Kravets reports in ars technica:

NYPD says it will cost $120 an hour to review, redact and process footage. The network is suing (PDF) the department in state court, complaining that the bill runs "counter to both the public policy of openness underlying FOIL, as well as the purported transparency supposedly fostered by the BWC (body worn camera) program itself.
As body cams continue to flourish in police departments across the nation, an ongoing debate has ensued about how much, if any, of that footage should be made public under state open-access laws.

An overlooked twist to that debate, however, has now become front and center: How much should the public have to pay for the footage if the police agree to release it? News network NY1, a Time Warner Cable News operation, was billed $36,000 by the NYPD for roughly 190 hours of footage it requested under the state's Freedom of Information Law (FOIL). Now the network is suing (PDF) the police department in New York state court, complaining that the price tag is too steep. The network said the bill runs "counter to both the public policy of openness underlying FOIL, as well as the purported transparency supposedly fostered by the BWC (body worn camera) program itself."
For its part, the police department said it is simply charging for the costs to review the footage and make whatever redactions are necessary to comply with legal and privacy concerns. The NYPD said it would take a police officer 190 hours to review the footage, at $120 per hour, plus an additional 114 hours to "copy the footage in a manner that will redact the exempt portions." That brings to 304 hours the amount of time to comply with the network's request, the NYPD said.
The police department did not say how it came to the $120-hourly rate, other than noting that "the cost of compensating a police officer is $120 per hour."
In its lawsuit, NY1 said the NYPD "denied NY1's request for unedited footage without specifying what material it plans to redact, how much material will be excluded from disclosure, or how the redaction will be performed. Instead, Respondents suggested that they may provide NY1 with edited footage, but only on the condition that NY1 remit $36,000.00, the alleged cost to the NYPD of performing its unidentified redactions."

0 comments:

Post a Comment