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flag U.S. police use AI to draft reports from body camera audio, saving time but raising concerns over bias and transparency.

flag Police departments across the U.S. are using AI to generate draft police reports from body camera audio, allowing officers to narrate incidents in real time while software creates initial drafts based solely on spoken words. flag The AI does not interpret or judge events, and officers retain legal responsibility, reviewing, editing, and signing off on final reports that must disclose AI use. flag Adopted by departments including Oklahoma City and New York, the technology aims to save time, improve accuracy, and ease staffing shortages, with the AI-in-law enforcement market projected to grow to over $6.6 billion by 2033. flag Concerns remain over transparency, algorithmic bias, and court admissibility, prompting cautious rollouts—such as Oklahoma City’s restriction to non-arrest incidents—alongside legal consultations.

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