Ubiquitous video recording hinders police lying.
Video evidence increasingly disproves police narratives:
"Civil rights lawyer Michael Avery, who is the board president of the National Police Accountability Project, said false claims by the police had long been known to inner-city communities.
"'But what is happening now with video, this is getting out into the larger world, into the media, into white communities, suburban communities, and people outside the affected communities are becoming more aware of what’s going on,' he said. 'It’s a completely different situation.'
"When he started practicing law 50 years ago, Avery said, claims of misconduct were hard to prove because it was often one person’s word against 'an officer and the officer’s buddies.'
"The habit of police giving false testimony is so widely known in New York that it has long been nicknamed 'testilying.' Officers are rarely held accountable because they enjoy broad legal protections, and prosecutors almost never charge them with perjury, Avery said."
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