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California Group Gives Ferguson Residents Cameras To Monitor Police

Jacob Crawford, an organizer for "We Copwatch," is currently working in Ferguson.
Emanuele Berry | St. Louis Public Radio
Jacob Crawford, an organizer for "We Copwatch," is currently working in Ferguson.
Jacob Crawford, an organizer for "We Copwatch," is currently working in Ferguson.
Credit Emanuele Berry | St. Louis Public Radio
Jacob Crawford, an organizer for "We Copwatch," is currently working in Ferguson.

The California-based group “We Copwatch” has raised more than $7,000 to purchase small video cameras. The group donated the cameras to residents of Canfield Green, the apartment complex where Michael Brown was shot.

So far, they have distributed about 100 cameras to monitor police and ensure accountability. They plan to pass out another hundred cameras early next week.

Jacob Crawford is an organizer with “We Copwatch.” He’s staying in Ferguson helping train residents on how to effectively use their cameras. He says monitoring cops is an act of defense.

“I copwatch for a lot of reason, but I think the biggest one is that you can impact the outcome of somebody’s stop in that moment,” he said. “Police are less inclined to hurt people when there are members of the public video taping and observing.”

Crawford says documenting police helps communities feel safe.

“The temperature is extremely volatile. The cops have just proved themselves to be such an illegitimate entity of the state,” he said. “People don’t have any choice but to think about how we take care of ourselves without these people.”

Copyright 2014 St. Louis Public Radio

Emanuele Berry is a 2012 graduate of Michigan State University. Prior to coming to St. Louis she worked as a talk show producer at WKAR Public Radio in Michigan. Emanuele also interned at National Public Radio, where she worked at the Arts and Information Desk. Her work has been recognized by the Michigan Association of Broadcasters, the Society of Professional Journalists, the Radio Television Digital News Association and the Hearst Journalism Awards Program. Berry worked with St. Louis Public Radio from 2014 to 2015.