BrutishMrFish
Member
The prosecutor should be scrutinized, too.
Yeah, I'm starting to think that the prosecutors that keep fucking up a lot of these cases involving police misconduct are doing it on purpose.
The prosecutor should be scrutinized, too.
In the January 2017 video, Baltimore Police Officer Richard Pinheiro appears to place a bag of pills under some garbage in an alley. He then walks back out to the street, at which point he activates the body camera. But because the cameras are programmed to capture the 30 seconds prior to activation, the officers actions before returning from the alley were recorded.
This with your avatar is perfect.I mean, we been tellin ya'll this for how long? Fuck the police.
Somebody didn't pay attention in training.
I guess he didn't read the manualHe then walks back out to the street, at which point he activates the body camera. But because the cameras are programmed to capture the 30 seconds prior to activation, the officers actions before returning from the alley were recorded.
:-3This with your avatar is perfect.
Everyone involved in that case should be fired.
Can't even imagine how many innocent people are doing hard time behind bars because of shit like this. The real criminals wear blue.
I always laugh at the bad apples argument. One bad apple could plant evidence and put you away for years, or take your life. Its not like bad apples in another industry where maybe they try to upsell you when all you want are your tires rotated.
I agree they should always be on, but if I recall right, their rationale for them not being on was the massive storage space having 100% uptime would consume.
Not saying I agree just answering the thought.
This will be his successful defense, yes. With the other officers verifying the story.Seriously guys. It is pretty obvious that he forgot to turn on the camera when they actually found the drugs.
Just trying to replay the events on camera.
I see. Is that ~20GB per day or for 4 months? I assume 4 months but I didn't want to assume.Quick mental calculation around 20gb give or take
I wonder how much storage would be required to store say...
- small but reasonable range of color
- 18fps
- 640x480 (maybe even 480 interlaced)
For a full shift (so let's say 8 hours)? Anyone have any guesses? Just thinking about how much storage space would be required to indeed store say 4 months of data for 1 officer.
:-3
How does the camera capture 30 seconds before activation? How would it know when you are going to press the button? Or does it just always record and not save?
I wonder how much storage would be required to store say...
- small but reasonable range of color
- 18fps
- 640x480 (maybe even 480 interlaced)
For a full shift (so let's say 8 hours)? Anyone have any guesses? Just thinking about how much storage space would be required to indeed store say 4 months of data for 1 officer.
:-3
I wonder how much storage would be required to store say...
- small but reasonable range of color
- 18fps
- 640x480 (maybe even 480 interlaced)
For a full shift (so let's say 8 hours)? Anyone have any guesses? Just thinking about how much storage space would be required to indeed store say 4 months of data for 1 officer.
:-3
The Compliance, Accountability and External Affairs Division (CAEAD) is responsible for enacting reforms resulting from the Department of Justice (DOJ) consent decree in a manner that improves working conditions for police officers, increases public safety for communities, and strengthens the relationship between law enforcement and citizens. The first unit of its kind to be created prior to the release of the DOJ's investigative results, CAEAD is comprised of three units: Reform/Programmatic Support, Internal Audits and Assessments, and External Affairs.
They've had this footage since January...
Damned Wired lol.
I can never catch a break with my last name.
H264 at 1080p x 30fps @ 4Mbps is about 2GB per hour. With H265, I think it's around 1.3-1.4GB per hour. For 480p at 18fps, you can probably get away with 1 Mbps. At 1Mbps, 1 hour of video is about 450MB. So for a full shift, about 4GB. So a cheap USB stick will be sufficient.I wonder how much storage would be required to store say...
- small but reasonable range of color
- 18fps
- 640x480 (maybe even 480 interlaced)
For a full shift (so let's say 8 hours)? Anyone have any guesses? Just thinking about how much storage space would be required to indeed store say 4 months of data for 1 officer.
:-3
uh ohhhhh, looks like someone has earned himself a bit of paid vacation!
Lazy excuses.
Fuck cops
I would buy the "bad apples" position if bullshit didn't happen every damn day.
I don't understand why stuff like this needs to be investigated when it involves cops. If this was a civilian the video would be evidence enough to charge someone in a crime. These cops will probably face no punishment for this and it's crazy.
paid leave -> resign -> get hired at a PD a few counties away
paid leave -> resign -> get hired at a PD a few counties away
Behold the power of a strong union. No wonder Republicans are trying to squash them. Aside from this one of course.
I don't understand why stuff like this needs to be investigated when it involves cops. If this was a civilian the video would be evidence enough to charge someone in a crime. These cops will probably face no punishment for this and it's crazy.
So about 750GB per officer to store 6 months of full 8-hour shifts. Assuming battery life issues could be resolved, hopefully this is something that can happen in the future. Also, that's about 1 exabyte for the entire US police force? Interesting. Anyway, that is a very reasonable amount of storage in 2017 on a per department basis and only gets more affordable as time goes along. Hopefully we get there.H264 at 1080p x 30fps @ 4Mbps is about 2GB per hour. With H265, I think it's around 1.3-1.4GB per hour. For 480p at 18fps, you can probably get away with 1 Mbps. At 1Mbps, 1 hour of video is about 450MB. So for a full shift, about 4GB. So a cheap USB stick will be sufficient.
I wonder how much storage would be required to store say...
- small but reasonable range of color
- 18fps
- 640x480 (maybe even 480 interlaced)
For a full shift (so let's say 8 hours)? Anyone have any guesses? Just thinking about how much storage space would be required to indeed store say 4 months of data for 1 officer.