Maybe the police are more concerned about being filmed napping in the back of a parking lot (while ostensibly radar gunning for speeders) and less concerned about being filmed brutalizing and shooting innocent people.
While both of these types of events occur sometimes, the second type is probably fairly rare and the first type probably much more common.
Maybe the idea is that if police think they are being watched they will act in a more accountable fashion. I don't see this being a bad thing at all.
While both of these types of events occur sometimes, the second type is probably fairly rare and the first type probably much more common.
Maybe the idea is that if police think they are being watched they will act in a more accountable fashion. I don't see this being a bad thing at all.