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.
-
Sidney Eskenazi, hospital philanthropist, dies weeks after wife
Sidney Eskenazi, whose $40 million gift helped build the Eskenazi Health hospital campus, has died, according to a statement from Eskenazi Health. His wife Lois died last month.
Black-owned barbershop connects cuts and culture through art
A local Black-owned barbershop on Indy's Old Southside is bringing a different kind of buzz to the neighborhood by blending haircuts and culture through art.
Speedway boil water advisory extended until at least Friday
Due to multiple water main breaks, the Town of Speedway has issued a precautionary water boil advisory for all residents and businesses town-wide, effective immediately.
ISP conducting death investigation following a house fire in Jennings County
ISP is investigating the death of a man in Jennings County following a house fire early Sunday morning.