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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."The city disagrees and it has a powerful ally in the U.S. Department of Justice. Federal prosecutors overseeing the settlement agreement between the city and DOJ required the city to adopt a body camera program as one of the steps to address shortcomings revealed during the 2020 racial justice protests. The DOJ has stayed out of the union negotiations but in federal court filings, the justice department has insisted the city prohibit prereview.

“Every agency in Oregon might do something a certain way, some of the big cities might do things a certain way, but those were the natural outgrowth of a union’s ability to bargain those provisions with their city governments,” Jared Hager assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Oregon overseeing the settlement agreement said in a community meeting last year. “To me, it reflects the strength of the union’s ability to bargain…it doesn’t necessarily represent a best practice.”

Hager said if an officer views his footage before writing a report, it would taint his recollection of why they chose to use force, adding everything depends on what was in the officer’s head at the time.

Federal prosecutors have said officers should write their reports first and write a supplemental report, if necessary, after viewing the footage.

Arbitration could take six to nine months and if the arbitrator sides with the union, it could open a new front in the conflict. The Department of Justice has said it reserves the right to reject the body camera policies and could ask U.S. District Judge Michael Simon to impose the department’s preferred policies prohibiting prereview."
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