-
NPR's Kelly McEvers interviews Jeff Sharlet, an associate professor at Dartmouth College, who reported on the March 2015 shooting death of Charly Keunang at the hands of police in Los Angeles.
-
Police cams have suddenly become a big business. But the real money is in selling departments a way to store each day's video. Firms are offering easy uploads to the cloud but costs are bound to grow.
-
Headlines for Friday, May 22, 2015:Oklahoma's Republican politicians share stage with high-profile GOP presidential hopefuls. (NewsOK)Budget deal allows…
-
Headlines for Monday, April 20, 2015:Reflections on an April morning 20 years ago. (NewsOK) New records raise questions over a gun used by a reserve…
-
A 73-year-old reserve sheriff's deputy can be heard in the video apologizing and admitting to shooting the suspect, Eric Harris.
-
Courts have ruled that civilians have a constitutional right to videotape police encounters in public. But civilians are not allowed to interfere with police activity.
-
They are being hailed as a technological solution to bad police-community relationships, but research on the cameras' impact is thin, and some departments are dealing with unintended consequences.
-
Headlines for Tuesday, January 20, 2015:For the fifth year in a row a state Senator proposes more cuts to personal income taxes. (Journal Record) A bill…
-
Headlines for Tuesday, January 13th, 2015:Governor Fallin is starting the first full day of her second and final term in office. (Tulsa World)The mascot…
-
The Columbia, Mo., police department gave its officers body cameras in July, saying they could help exonerate officers from claims of abuse of force. After Ferguson, the demand for cameras surged.