AVON — Officers with the Avon Police Department are now outfitted with body cameras, which the agency says will allow them to better protect the community and themselves, and increase transparency.
A $30,000 grant from the Indiana Department of Homeland Security made it possible.
All 38 officers on staff with the Avon Police Department have them. It's a move Deputy Chief Brian Nugent says is important.
"So the idea that these camera systems can preclude us from being in a situation where we say, 'The officer neglected to turn on their body camera, they did not have it activated,' this technology allows us to not have to worry about that," said Nugent.
Officers with the department say it gives them comfort.
"If there is any question about how I handle a situation or say something happens to me ... Unfortunately, we live in a society and a time period where officers are being ambushed. Just having that documentation, that recording can help detect and really proceed that investigation and hopefully catch the people who are doing those things," said Sgt. James Schwartz a seven-year veteran with the department.
Each body camera is about $1,000. The recordings are in 4K resolution.
The department received the funding for the cameras through the Criminal Justice Reform Bill, also known as House Bill 1006. The money was granted through the Indiana Department of Homeland Security.
-
Pacers president Kevin Pritchard shares update on Tyrese Haliburton's recovery
Pacers star guard Tyrese Haliburton missed the entire 2025-26 Pacers season as he recovered from his torn Achilles that he suffered in Game 7 of the 2025 NBA Finals.
Fever stars Aliyah Boston, Caitlin Clark lead WNBA All-Star fan voting
Fever star center Aliyah Boston and star guard Caitlin Clark are first and second, respectively, in WNBA All-Star fan voting.
Storms and heavy rain to finish the week, scorching heat and humidity
Rain chances return to the forecast in the coming days. Flooding is something to monitor south of I-70.
New chairman vows to 'heavily scrutinize any requests' from Indiana utilities
The newly appointed chairman at the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission vowed to “heavily scrutinize any requests” from utilities to increase their rates.