Panel approves interim study on police body-camera policy

Unidentified Legislative Body ยท February 7, 2026

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Summary

Members voted unanimously to convert House Bill 1587 into an interim study, citing unresolved disagreements over public access, evidence integrity and unfunded costs to law enforcement; lawmakers recommended forming a balanced study commission.

Speaker 1 moved during an executive session to convert House Bill 1587 into an interim study, saying the legislature has considered multiple bills and conflicting amendments on body-worn cameras and that the issues remain unresolved. "We need to balance the public's ability to access these public records, in a way that doesn't damage the integrity of evidence, cost the police more money, or unnecessarily subject our law enforcement to becoming in their own YouTube channel," Speaker 1 said.

The motion was seconded and carried on a unanimous roll call, 12-0. Speaker 1 urged a deliberate approach: the interim study should form a commission that includes prosecutors, defense bar representatives and members of the legislative body so stakeholders on all sides are represented.

The committee framed the move as procedural: the interim study pauses immediate legislative action on the bill while the commission gathers evidence, clarifies funding implications and examines how disclosure rules would interact with criminal prosecutions and department budgets. No specific funding source for new camera programs or evidence-handling costs was identified during the discussion.

With the vote, the item will move off active consideration for now and the body will revisit findings from the study later in the legislative calendar, likely in the fall. The clerk recorded the vote as unanimous, and the chair indicated no objection to placing related items on consent.