Ohio prisons to deploy more than 5,000 body cameras

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio will deploy more than 5,000 body cameras in all 28 prisons and its adult parole authority offices by May, the state corrections agency director said Thursday as details of the plan were unveiled.

The agency signed a contract with Scottsdale, Arizona-based Axon for the cameras costing $6.9 million the first year and just over $3 million annually in the future, a cost that covers the cameras and remote storage of footage.

The cameras will complement the approximately 6,000 stationary cameras already in Ohio prisons. They are not an end-all solution to violence in prisons, but another tool to protect both guards and inmates, said Annette Chambers-Smith, director of the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

“This is just one piece in an overarching plan to have our prisons be as safe as possible for the people that live and work in them,” she said.

She added: “The camera is the perfect witness, it’s unbiased. And we will have a lot more information than we’ve had in the past.”

With the roll-out, Ohio joins a growing number of states’ prison systems outfitting guards with body cameras, even in correctional environments already covered by thousands of stationary security cameras.

The agency outfitted about 550 supervisors in all Ohio prisons with the cameras by the end of last month, and will now begin deploying another 4,500 statewide, starting with the Ohio State Penitentiary, the state’s supermax prison in Youngstown. In some cases electrical work must be completed first, Chambers-Smith said.

In general, it’s up to guards when to activate the cameras, although there will be some automatic triggers, such as guards pulling out pepper spray cannisters or parole officers pulling their guns. Officers in a control room may also have the ability to automatically deploy the cameras, Chambers-Smith said.

The cameras will include a “lookback” function that will provide full audio and video footage 90 seconds before a camera is activated. Individual cameras will also store up to 18 hours of video without sound that can be reviewed, Chambers-Smith said.

A message was left with Axon seeking comment.

The union representing Ohio prisons guards had questioned the need for the cameras, saying money would be better spent on more staff. Chambers-Smith said purchasing the camera system is separate from an ongoing initiative to hire more guards, but the pandemic-related worker shortage has made that difficult.

A pilot program last year saw decreases in overtime, prison violence, and use of force by guards that the agency attributes to the cameras.

The Ohio agency started examining the issue after a California judge ordered body cameras for guards at a state prison in San Diego following allegations of abuse of prisoners with disabilities. California later expanded the cameras to five other prisons.

In November, the state agreed to pay $17.5 million to settle a lawsuit brought by an Ohio inmate paralyzed during a takedown by prison guards at Chillicothe Correctional Institution. Last January, an inmate died during a scuffle with guards the Correctional Reception Center in Orient.

The body camera plan was already in the works before those incidents but they underscored the importance of deploying them, Chambers-Smith said.

In addition to California, Florida, Georgia, New York, Virginia and Wisconsin are among states that have tested or implemented body cameras in prisons in some form.

By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

Associated Press

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