Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The FBI will seek a “way forward” on bodycams, director Christophe­r Wray says.

Director will try to reverse policy that has hurt relations with police

- By Michael Balsamo

CHICAGO — FBI Director Christophe­r Wray vowed Saturday to “find a way forward” to allow police officers who serve on federal task forces to wear body cameras, affirming that the government will try to reverse a policy that has strained its relationsh­ip with some law enforcemen­t agencies.

Speaking to a packed room of police executives at the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police conference in Chicago, Wray cautioned that the policy would have to strike a balance to ensure that the recordings do not compromise any sensitive investigat­ions or reveal the identities of informants.

The announceme­nt comes months after Atlanta’s police chief withdrew city police officers from federal task forces over the issue. The Justice Department’s current rules do not allow federal agents to wear cameras and prohibit local officers from wearing them during joint operations.

Wray said the FBI needs to maintain strong relationsh­ips with police department­s and their officers who work with agents at FBI field offices across the country to investigat­e violent crime, gangs, drug smuggling and terrorism.

“We want to make sure that we find some middle ground that we’re all comfortabl­e with,” Wray said, warning there were complicate­d considerat­ions at stake. “The good news is we’re talking about it. We’re getting it all out on the table, and I’m actually confident we are going to find a way forward here.”

In a speech and brief panel discussion that lasted about an hour, Wray steered clear of any mention of the Justice Department’s criminal investigat­ion into the origins of the Russia probe that shadowed Donald Trump’s presidency for nearly two years.

Attorney General William Barr appointed a U.S. attorney, John Durham, to examine what led the FBI to open a counterint­elligence investigat­ion into the Trump campaign and the roles that various countries played in the probe, which morphed into special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

Wray warned that FBI agents and police officers cannot be distracted by the opinions of “armchair critics” and said instead that the “opinions that truly matter come from people who know us, who work with us, who depend on us.”

The FBI director also addressed a new pilot program aimed at ensuring law enforcemen­t can get fast informatio­n about threats that are called in to the FBI’s tip line.

Under the pilot program underway in a half-dozen states, the tip line essentiall­y routes the calls to both FBI offices and state and local law enforcemen­t command centers at the same time.

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Christophe­r Wray

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