MOORESVILLE — “This is a commitment to our community to have professional police officers and to continue to improve,” Mooresville Police Chief Kerry Buckner said.
Starting December 21, all 22 police officers in Mooresville will be wearing body worn cameras, something Chief Kerry Buckner said will help make them better.
Every officer on Mooresville’s department will now be wearing the same body worn cameras.
For the last several years they’ve had cameras on their dashboards, but this will allow officers to record everything that happens during a traffic stop, investigation or any day-to-day conversations.
“It’s going to give us better cases because of the evidence will be better, you know, using the body cameras and the second thing is going to do so it's going to increase our training. We can actually do after action reviews using body footage body worn footage to see what we did right what we did wrong and that way we can continuously improve our officer’s performance,” Chief Buckner said.
He said these cameras will help them in every aspect of the job and all of the officers are excited to start using the new technology.
-
Local couple launches app aimed at spreading kindness, combating online negativity
Simon Property Group announces the passing of David Simon
David Simon, CEO and President of Simon Property Group, one of the most admired retail real estate companies in the world, has died. He was 64 years old.
IU football's national championship trophies are heading on a statewide tour
Indiana University Athletics is hitting the road this spring, bringing the Hoosiers' national championship trophy directly to fans across Indiana.
Indy family searching for missing 16-year-old last seen on city's west side
An Indianapolis family is desperate for answers after their 16-year-old disappeared from the city's west side last week without warning.