Trending Topics

Detroit police union sues to halt city law regarding body, dash cam footage release

The new city ordinance that requires the release of body and dash cam footage of a police officer causing great bodily harm to the public within 30 days of the incident

Screenshot 2025-11-12 153852.png

Detroit Police Department

By Louis Aguilar
The Detroit News

DETROIT — The Detroit Police Officers Association is asking a Wayne County Circuit Court judge to place a temporary injunction on a new city ordinance that requires the release of body and dash cam footage of a police officer causing great bodily harm to the public within 30 days of the incident.

The police union contends the new law can lead to the public release of identifiable images and information of police officers, potentially endangering their lives, according to a lawsuit filed Monday in Wayne County Circuit Court.

| POLICE RESEARCH: How 8-, 10- and 12-hour police shifts affect staffing and wellness

Detroit Corporation Counsel Conrad Mallett said Wednesday the police union is misinterpreting the new ordinance.

“Either the DPOA did not thoroughly read the ordinance, or they simply misunderstand it,” Mallett said in a statement to The Detroit News. “This could have been sorted out with a phone call instead of a lawsuit.”

The new ordinance the City Council passed on Oct. 28 changes the department’s existing requirements to release body and dash cam footage related to shootings within 30 days of the incident. The new ordinance extends the requirement to footage involving the use of bodily harm by an officer. It also requires the city “to create and maintain a publicly accessible website or similar portal dedicated to the posting” of the footage.

In addition to the safety concerns, the new policy violates the collective bargaining agreement between the police union and the city, the union’s lawsuit contends.

Mallett said there is “no basis for this lawsuit or the request for a temporary restraining order.”

The new ordinance takes steps to protect the identity of officers, he said.

“It is codified in the council-approved ordinance that any and all contractually protected officer information shall not be released through this process,” Mallett said.

“In fact, whether the release of video would violate the collective bargaining agreement, per the ordinance, is the first question that must be answered” in the court case.

Trending
Body camera video fueled discussion about use-of-force decisions, policy, training and the responsibility of pet owners during police encounters
Dean Gialamas, LAPD’s chief information officer, told several news outlets that the LAPD is seeking more protections around the information collected by Flock Safety
NYPD
The Grammy winner “has paid already the cost of the permit that was lodged, which was over $160,000 for that event and for the response to that event,” Mayor Zohran Mamdani said
Nearly 600 commenters celebrated Kemah Officer Jordan Wilmore’s persistence while wondering how he will fit inside a patrol vehicle

laguilar@detroitnews.com
©2025 The Detroit News. Visit detroitnews.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Company News
Cloud-based platform built into CentralSquare’s best-in-class Public Safety suites connects dispatch, records, AI-powered intelligence, and investigations into a single experience