What is needed
Is surveillance of the police by the public. The police have far too many powers which they consistently misuse. They are not to be trusted, which is why they all need to be put under surveillance.
San Francisco cops earlier this year obtained permission to access 450 surveillance cameras belonging to private businesses to live monitor protests expected following the killing of Tyre Nichols, it emerged today. That permission was sought under a controversial surveillance rule approved last fall in the US city. The …
I remember the case of those two cops who ignored a burglary call right next to them to plat pokemon go instead, and how they were able to try and argue that the conversation that was recorded wasn't admissable because it was 'personal' talk or some such... which was thrown out of course, dereliction of duty and all going on...
Okay, I must be missing something, because everything I'm reading explicitly states that the police must obtain permission from the camera owner. Yes, we can all imagine the permission clause being abused, but it's a pretty big barrier to certain forms of misuse, because a camera owner might very well withdraw said permission if they feel it is bad for them. Current culture that I see in the Bay area I've seen includes refusal to offer even non-real time view into the cameras to police even if a crime has been committed, so I don't see it as overly likely that many camera owners will cooperate unless they see it as explicitly to their advantage.
A dozen police turn up and say "We think a bunch of trouble makers are going to riot outside your shop". Can we have access to your camera.
In reality it's a bunch of people wanting civil rights, just matching and waving a few flags.
Then do the cops come back and say. Ok done, please revoke our access and permission?
I think not.
Yes, it's just possible there's some imbalance of power potentially affecting the camera owner's decision to permit or refuse access.
There is a reason for the principle of requiring warrants for searches. That reason does not magically go away when the police promise to be nice and a craven city government rubber-stamps their requests.