Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph G. Recto today called for an accelerated procurement program to equip officers and patrol cars of the Philippine National Police (PNP) with dashboard and body cameras.

(Senate of the Philippines / MANILA BULLETIN)
“If food delivery guys wear them or have them on their bikes, why can’t our police officers and cars have them, too?” he asked.
Recto said at the rate the PNP is buying bodycams, “it will take 100 years” to provide every policeman with one.
“Pero actually ang kailangan lang sa ngayon ay 40,000, or even less, on the assumption that only 1 for every 5 policemen, or those who will go on patrol or operations would be needing one. But at (the) current acquisition rate, 20 years pa rin ang aabutin (it will reach 20 years),” Recto said. (What we really need are 40,000 or even less…)
Recto used as basis the much-delayed delivery of 2,600 bodycams to the PNP this year, the procurement of which began in 2017 during the term of Senator Ronald dela Rosa as PNP chief.
He praised dela Rosa for championing the idea that these cameras be made police standard equipment.
A bill which guides their use and funds their acquisition has cleared the Senate Committee on Public Order which De La Rosa chairs.
It was Recto and then Senator JV Ejercito who shepherded the inclusion of P5.6 billion in the 2017 national budget for police equipment modernization.
Recto said equipping police officers with bodycams and dash cams “will save evidence needed to prosecute criminals. Sabi nga nila, may resibo.” (They say there is a receipt.)
“Played in court, the footage will buttress the case of the prosecution with evidence that is hard to refute. Cameras will also ensure that procedures are being followed in police operations. This cuts both ways. It will protect citizens from abuse, and the police from unfounded charges of abuse,” he said.
“Ganoon din sa dashcams. Kung may aksidente, or pursuit operations, or kahit kaso ng reckless overspeeding, may video proof,” he said. (You have a vide proof {provided by dashcams} in accidents or pursuit operations or even reckless overspeeding.)
It is also a tool for police commanders who will know if patrol cars did go on their route, Recto added
“Malalaman kung nag-ronda nga ba ang isang patrol car or pumarada lang sa ilalim ng puno. It is a tool for smart policing. Sa ngayon nga, pwede mo-itrack real time ang food delivery mo,’’ he said. (You will know whether a police car went on patrol or was just parked under a tree. ..Now you can track our food delivery.)
Recto said the cameras are not big-ticket acquisitions.
“In this age of Facebook Live, and when dashcams are sold on the sidewalk, there’s no excuse why our policemen still do not have what is standard police gear in many countries,’’ he pointed out.
Recto said he agrees with “cautionary opinions” on when use of video cameras or the release of their footage shall be restricted, “like when lives of confidential informants will be jeopardized or when any recording impinges on private rights or the Data Privacy Act.”
He admitted that the program to equip the PNP with dashcams and bodycams would require yearly appropriations.
“Next year’s P3.45 billion capital outlay budget of the PNP is not enough,’’ he added.
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