In the summer of 2020, against a backdrop of outrage over racist police violence and massive demonstrations following the Minneapolis police murder of George Floyd, Democratic lawmakers in New Mexico passed a law requiring law enforcement to use body-worn cameras and save the footage. Now, Senate Democrats are rolling the law back, creating more leniency and exemptions.
, sponsored in 2020 by Sen. Joe Cervantes (D-Do帽a Ana), applies to state, county and city law enforcement. It assumes officers who don鈥檛 use their body cams, or who erase them, are being intentionally dishonest and spoiling evidence. A bill moving through the Legislature would allow a judge to make that call on a case-by-case basis.
鈥淎nd that鈥檚 the way it should have been when I passed this bill originally,鈥 Cervantes said on the Senate floor Wednesday. 鈥淚 put such a harsh result in the original legislation, and that鈥檚 because we had a very small handful of law enforcement who said they would not honor the wishes of this legislature.鈥
Cervantes said Manny Gonzales, then-sheriff of the state鈥檚 largest county, was 鈥渙penly hostile鈥 to the requirement, but that things look different in 2023.
鈥淚 believe the resistance has now evaporated entirely,鈥 he told his colleagues.
In addition to more wiggle room on whether to use the lapel cameras, officers working undercover or dealing with an explosive device would be exempt entirely under
The proposal鈥檚 sponsor, Democratic Sen. Harold Pope, says a third exemption for officers notifying a member of the public of a death was removed from the original bill after state and Albuquerque police said those types of interactions can create situations that are helpful to capture.
Republican Sen. Craig Brandt told Pope during debate on the Senate floor that he was grateful Democrats were pulling back on the body cam requirement but said many GOP lawmakers saw issues with it from the jump.
鈥淭hese things could have been fixed in 2020,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut we were ignored.鈥
While research on the tech鈥檚 effectiveness , that updates earlier studies showed police use of force dropped by 10% when their cameras were on.
The Senate passed the bill unanimously. It鈥檒l now get vetted in the House.