On Jan. 2, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signed House Bill 315 into law, setting prices law enforcement departments could charge for video requests. The law says departments can charge up to $75 per hour of ...
Gov. Mike DeWine signed House Bill 315 into law, allowing departments to charge up to hundreds of dollars for body and dash cam video requests in the state of Ohio.
Protecting the police? What kind of law takes steps away from transparency and accountability? In Ohio, the government believes it's fair.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) signed a new measure into law earlier this week that permits police departments to charge the ...
Police Ohio are defending their soon-to-be new ability to charge hundreds of dollars for body camera footage requested by the ...
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine signed a bill allowing police to charge for public records, including body cam, dashboard and jail footage.
Gov. Mike DeWine signed the bill into law late Thursday night, which allows police to charge $75 an hour for that video.
House Bill 315, now signed into law, means law enforcement agencies can charge up to $750 for video, such as body cam, dash cam and jail footage. House Bill 315, now signed into law, means law ...
Ohioans will now likely have to pay hundreds of dollars to see police videos after Republican Gov. Mike DeWine signed a large ...
DeWine said while body cameras have helped with police accountability, providing that footage as public records can be a time-consuming burden for law enforcement agencies.