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Behind the Yellow Sticker: Paradoxical Effects of a Visual Warning of Body-worn Cameras on the Use of Police Force

NCJ Number
309680
Journal
Journal of Experimental Criminology Dated: July 2024
Author(s)
Noy Assaraf; Alejandro Mouro; Donald M. Papy; Noel Castillo; Barak Ariel
Date Published
July 2024
Length
23 pages
Annotation

This article reports on the methodology and findings from an experiment that examined the effectiveness of visual warnings regarding the use of body-worn cameras in reducing the number of police-public encounters where use of force was employed when compared with those situations where visual warnings were not provided.

Abstract

Research on police body-worn cameras (BWCs) draws attention to the need for suspects to be aware of the devices for them to exert a deterrent, “civilizing effect,” which can manifest as a reduction in the use of force in police-public interactions. This awareness can be manipulated audibly, visually, or both, yet no trials exist to test a visual stimulus that increases awareness of BWCs relative to BWCs without this function. In this field experiment, the authors tested the effect of a visual warning of BWCs on use-of-force incidence. A six-month cluster-randomized controlled trial involving spatiotemporal police units was conducted in Miami Beach, Florida. The units were randomly assigned to the experimental group, which included officers who wore BWCs featuring multiple yellow stickers and “VIDEO & AUDIO” logo (used as a visual warning). Officers in the control group were equipped with BWCs without yellow stickers. Neither group was required to announce the presence of the BWCs, thus isolating the visual warning from the audial warning. Poisson regression models estimate the treatment effect, with confirmatory subgroup analyses based on the proactive versus reactive interactions. Statistically significant differences in the use of force by officers, but in the contrary direction: higher rate of use of force due to equipping officers with BWCs with yellow stickers relative to BWCs without the yellow stickers. Relative change analysis indicates that yellow stickers cause an increase in the rate of use of force in incidents involving proactive policing, with a less pronounced increase in reactive policing. Without contextualizing their use to citizens, raising awareness of the presence of BWCs can aggravate police-public encounters. (Published Abstract Provided)