Overland Park Police Department to review body cam policies
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — The Overland Park Police Department will spend most of 2025 reevaluating its policies.
This will be the department's first full year with a new police chief and more often than not, with new leadership comes new rules.
New exhibit at Johnson County Museum looks at human relationship with water
Chief Doreen Jokerst was sworn in in October 2024. Last week, she expressed her plans to the public safety committee to review what she called 'high-liability policies.'
That review process will take place throughout 2025. It is too early to tell what changes are coming but one area of review is the department's body cam policy.
OPPD officers started using body cams at the tail end of 2019, and in the years since, expanded its use of them.
That trend will continue in 2026 after a budget of more than 3 million dollars was approved for new cameras.
View the latest headlines from Kansas City, Missouri, and Kansas at fox4kc.com
Ideally, these new cameras and rules will be here and established before the start of the World Cup in 2026.
The department last adjusted its body cam policy in 2024.
How they are used, who is responsible for maintaining them, and how footage is released to the public are all areas up for review.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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The protests had largely been peaceful but flared up when heavily armed, masked agents raided Los Angeles businesses. Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, defended the raids and said those arrested by ICE included a Vietnamese man convicted of second-degree murder, an Ecuadoran man convicted of possession of five kilograms of cocaine, and a Filipino man convicted of sexual offenses. On Monday, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said local immigrant rights groups had confirmed at least five ICE raids in the Los Angeles region. The mayor said officials were still working to compile more information on the raids but noted that in some cases, ICE targeted day laborers and detained people who appeared for scheduled immigration appointments. "As you know, ICE does not tell anybody where they're going to go or when they're going to be there," Bass said at the Monday news conference. Protests also sprang up in at least nine other cities across the U.S. on Monday, including New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco, according to Reuters. Protests in Los Angeles were relatively peaceful when they began on Friday, but escalated into scenes of chaos, with electric vehicles lit aflame, large clouds of tear gas and clashes between law enforcement and demonstrators. Trump has backed his move to send in troops, calling the protests 'violent, insurrectionist mobs' and 'lawless riots.' But Newsom said it was Trump who 'instigated violence.' Experts say while there are legal definitions for a riot, the term has become increasingly politicized and encapsulates a wide variety of incidents. In most states including California, the key determinator lies in whether multiple people are involved and whether they are committing acts of violence, Brian Higgins, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, said. 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Los Angeles Times
12 hours ago
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