FACTSHEET Detention Monitoring Tool  Second edition Video recording in police custody Addressing risk factors to prevent torture and ill-treatment ‘The findings during the 2006 visit suggest that audio-video recording in the interrogation rooms of Garda stations may have been a significant contributing factor to reducing the amount of ill-treatment alleged by persons detained.’ Report of the visit of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture to Ireland, 2006 1. Definition and context In the past decade there has been an unprecedented growth in the use of closed-circuit television (CCTV) monitoring systems. Most CCTV is used in public areas with the intended objective of deterring crime and providing security to the public, but CCTV is also increasingly used in places of deprivation of liberty. This Factsheet focuses on the use of CCTV in places under the authority of the police – whether police stations or police vehicles – where the deployment of CCTV has been observed in a significant number of countries. It also addresses the issue of videorecording of police interrogations, which differs from CCTV monitoring both in its purpose and in the manner in which it is commonly used. Despite the limitations in scope, it should be stressed that the majority of issues raised in this paper are also relevant for other custodial settings, notably prisons. Video-recording (and possibly audio-recording) can be used with different objectives which revolve around deterrence, protection, security and accountability. Given their different objectives, it is useful to distinguish between the recording of police interrogations and the use of CCTV as a general monitoring system. The main purposes of recording police interrogations are: • to prevent torture and other ill-treatment during questioning, as well as to provide protection • to police officials against false allegations (deterrence and protection); • to secure evidence for legal proceedings (accountability). The main purposes of using CCTV in a police station or police vehicle are: • to ensure the overall monitoring of what takes place on the premises (security and protection); • to prevent suicides, self-harm and incidents of violence (deterrence and protection); • to prevent torture and other ill-treatment, as well as to provide protection to police officials against false allegations (deterrence and protection). In some contexts, CCTV may be used to compensate for a shortage of staff, even though this may not be acknowledged. Overreliance on CCTV may also increase the risk of dehumanising places of detention. There are pros and cons to the use of CCTV monitoring in places under the authority of law enforcement agencies, but the recording of police interrogations is widely recognised to be an important safeguard against torture and other ill-treatment. Various cases of ill-treatment by the police have been revealed by video-recording and resulted in the investigation and prosecution of the perpetrators.1 CCTV never provides a full record of police conduct from the moment of arrest to the release or transfer to another facility. As stated by the Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (SPT), ‘[m]ost of the alleged acts of police brutality reported to the delegation during its visit to the State party appear to have occurred in the street or in police vans during transportation of detainees to police facilities’.2 As the transfer of detainees is a moment of particular risk, 1. See, for example, ‘Moment a policeman lost his temper… and his career: CCTV catches officer using ‘pain restraint’ to calm 15-year-old who refused to do as he was told’, Daily Mail (UK), 10 October 2012. Available at: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2215608/PC-Stephen-Hudson-sparedjail-CCTV-captures-using-pain-restraint-boy-15.html#ixzz2iYBDayIq <accessed 23 October 2013> 2. Report on the visit of the Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (SPT) to Mexico, CAT/OP/ MEX/1, 31 May 2010, para. 141. Penal Reform International | Video recording in police custody: Addressing risk factors to prevent torture and ill-treatment |1

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