Tennessee 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Tennessee Senate Bill SB1174 Draft / Bill

Filed 02/06/2025

                     
HOUSE BILL 741 
 By McKenzie 
 
SENATE BILL 1174 
By Akbari 
 
 
SB1174 
002861 
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AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 38, 
Chapter 1, relative to body cameras for law 
enforcement officers. 
 
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE: 
 SECTION 1.  Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 38, Chapter 1, is amended by adding 
the following as a new part: 
 38-1-1001. As used in this part: 
(1)  "Body camera recording" or "recording" means any audio or video recording 
taken by a law enforcement officer through use of a body camera; 
 (2)  "Law enforcement agency" means a governmental unit of one (1) or more 
persons employed full time or part time by the state, or political subdivision of the state, 
for the purpose of preventing and detecting crime and enforcing laws or local ordinances 
and the employees of which are authorized to make arrests for crimes while acting within 
the scope of their authority; 
(3)  "Law enforcement officer" means any person authorized by law to conduct 
searches and effectuate arrests and who is employed by the state, a county, a 
municipality, or a metropolitan form of government; 
(4)  "Minor" means any person under eighteen (18) years of age; 
 (5)  "Next of kin" means a person's spouse, parents, legal guardians, 
grandparents, siblings, and children; and 
 (6)  "Subject of the recording" means:   
 
 
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 (A)  A person, including a law enforcement officer, suspect, victim, 
detainee, conversant, injured party, or other similarly situated person, who 
appears or can be heard on the body camera recording; and 
 (B)  Does not include a person who only incidentally appears or is heard 
on the body camera recording. 
 38-1-1002. 
(a)  A law enforcement agency that uses body cameras shall adopt a written 
policy for the use of the body cameras by its law enforcement officers in compliance with 
this part.  Law enforcement officers must receive a copy of the written policy and training 
in the use of body cameras before using such cameras.  The training must include, at a 
minimum, instruction on this part and the agency's written policy. 
(b)  Only law enforcement officers with the authority to conduct searches and 
make arrests are permitted to wear a body camera.  Law enforcement officers who serve 
an undercover role are not subject to this part. 
(c)  A written policy adopted by a law enforcement agency pursuant to subsection 
(a) must include, at a minimum, guidelines on the use of body cameras by law 
enforcement officers to: 
(1)  Ensure that body cameras are worn by law enforcement officers in a 
location and manner that maximizes the camera's ability to capture video footage 
of the officer's activities; 
(2)  Provide standards for when a law enforcement officer must enable 
and disable recording functions of the body camera, including: 
 (A)  A requirement that a law enforcement officer activate a body 
camera whenever responding to a call for service;   
 
 
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 (B)  A requirement that body cameras be activated at the initiation 
of a law enforcement or investigative encounter between a law 
enforcement officer and a member of the public, except when there is an 
immediate threat to the officer's or another's life or safety that makes 
activating the body camera impossible or dangerous; 
 (C)  A requirement that in situations as described in subdivision 
(c)(2)(B) in which activating a body camera is impossible or dangerous, a 
law enforcement officer must activate the camera at the first reasonable 
opportunity to do so; 
 (D)  A requirement that a law enforcement officer must not 
deactivate a body camera until the encounter between a law enforcement 
officer and a member of the public has fully concluded and the law 
enforcement officer leaves the scene; and 
 (E)  A requirement that a law enforcement officer currently at the 
scene or arriving thereafter who is equipped with a body camera must 
activate the camera and record the situation upon arrival, and that the 
body camera must remain on until the officer leaves the scene; and 
(3)  Require law enforcement officers wearing body cameras to notify the 
subjects of the recording that the subjects are being recorded by a body camera 
as close to the inception of the encounter as is reasonably possible. 
(d)  Notwithstanding subsection (c), the written policy must make exceptions to 
the use of body cameras in the following circumstances: 
(1)  Prior to entering a private residence without a warrant or in non-
exigent circumstances, a law enforcement officer shall ask the occupant if the 
occupant wants the officer to discontinue use of the officer's body camera.  If the   
 
 
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occupant responds affirmatively, then the law enforcement officer must 
immediately discontinue use of the body camera; 
(2)  When interacting with an apparent crime victim, including, but not 
limited to, a victim of domestic abuse, as defined in § 36-3-601, or a victim of 
rape, as defined in § 39-13-503, a law enforcement officer shall, as soon as 
practicable, ask the victim if the victim wants the officer to discontinue use of the 
officer's body camera.  If the victim responds affirmatively, then the law 
enforcement officer must immediately discontinue use of the body camera; and 
(3)  When interacting with a person seeking to anonymously report a 
crime or assist in an ongoing law enforcement investigation, a law enforcement 
officer shall, as soon as practicable, ask the person if the person wants the 
officer to discontinue use of the officer's body camera.  If the person responds 
affirmatively, then the law enforcement officer must immediately discontinue use 
of the body camera. 
(e)  Requests to discontinue use of a body camera made pursuant to subsection 
(d), and the responses thereto, must be recorded by the body camera prior to 
discontinuing use of the body camera. 
38-1-1003. 
(a)  Body cameras must not be used in a manner inconsistent with the purposes 
described in this part. 
(b)  Body cameras must not be used to gather intelligence information based on 
First Amendment protected speech, association, or religion, or to record activity that is 
unrelated to a response to a call for service or a law enforcement or investigative 
encounter between a law enforcement officer and a member of the public.   
 
 
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(c)  Law enforcement officers must not activate a body camera while on the 
grounds of any public, private, or parochial elementary or secondary school, as defined 
in § 49-6-301, except when responding to an imminent threat to life or safety. 
38-1-1004. 
(a)  A law enforcement agency providing a body camera to an officer as 
authorized by this part shall establish a written policy for the retention of data by the 
agency in compliance with this section. 
(b)  Except as provided in subsection (c), body camera recordings must be 
retained by the law enforcement agency that employs the officer, or an authorized agent 
as described in § 38-1-1005(d), whose body camera captured the recording, for six (6) 
months from the date it was recorded, after which time the recording must be 
permanently deleted. 
 (c)  Notwithstanding subsection (b): 
(1)  Body camera recordings must be automatically retained for at least 
three (3) years if the body camera recordings involve: 
(A)  Any use of force; 
(B)  Events leading up to and including an arrest for a felony 
offense, or events that constitute a felony offense; or 
(C)  An encounter about which a complaint has been registered by 
a subject of the body camera recording within the six (6) months following 
the recording. 
(2)  Body camera recordings must be retained for at least three (3) years 
if voluntarily requested, within six (6) months following the recording, by:   
 
 
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(A)  The law enforcement officer using the body camera, if that 
officer reasonably asserts the recording has evidentiary or exculpatory 
value; 
(B)  A law enforcement officer who is a subject of the body camera 
recording, if that officer reasonably asserts the recording has evidentiary 
or exculpatory value; 
(C)  A superior officer of a law enforcement officer using a body 
camera or who is a subject of the recording, if that superior officer 
reasonably asserts the recording has evidentiary or exculpatory value; 
(D)  A law enforcement officer, if the recording is being retained 
solely and exclusively for police training purposes; 
(E)  A member of the public who is a subject of the recording; 
(F)  A parent or legal guardian of a minor who is a subject of the 
recording; or 
(G)  A deceased subject's next of kin or legally authorized 
designee. 
(d)  To effectuate subdivisions (c)(2)(E), (c)(2)(F), and (c)(2)(G), the persons 
specified in those subdivisions may review the specific body camera recording in order 
to make a determination as to whether the person will voluntarily request the recording 
be subject to a three-year retention period. 
(e)  Body camera recordings are part of the public record for the purpose of 
public inspection under § 10-7-503, except for the following: 
(1)  A body camera recording not subject to a minimum three-year 
retention period pursuant to subsection (c);   
 
 
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(2)  A body camera recording that is subject to a minimum three-year 
retention period solely and exclusively pursuant to subdivision (c)(1)(C), if the 
subject of the body camera recording requests the body camera recordings not 
be made available to the public; 
(3)  A body camera recording that is subject to a minimum three-year 
retention period solely and exclusively pursuant to subdivisions (c)(2)(A), 
(c)(2)(B), (c)(2)(C), or (c)(2)(D);  
(4)  A body camera recording that is subject to a minimum three-year 
retention period solely and exclusively pursuant to subdivision (c)(2)(E), (c)(2)(F), 
or (c)(2)(G), if the person makes a voluntary request that the body camera 
recording not be made available to the public; and 
(5)  A body camera recording depicting circumstances described in § 10-
7-504(u). 
(f)  A law enforcement officer shall not review, or receive an accounting of, any 
body camera recording that is subject to a minimum three-year retention period pursuant 
to subdivision (c)(1) prior to completing any required initial reports, statements, and 
interviews regarding the recorded event. 
(g)  A body camera recording retained beyond six (6) months solely and 
exclusively pursuant to subdivision (c)(2)(D) is not admissible as evidence in any 
criminal, civil, or administrative proceeding. 
38-1-1005. 
(a)  A law enforcement agency providing a body camera to an officer as 
authorized by this part shall adopt a written policy for access to body camera recordings 
by the agency in compliance with this section.   
 
 
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(b)  Body camera recordings that are not subject to a minimum three-year 
retention period pursuant to § 38-1-1004 are not subject to automated analysis or 
analytics. 
(c)  Body camera recordings must not be divulged, or used by any law 
enforcement agency, for any commercial or other non-law enforcement purpose. 
(d)  If a law enforcement agency authorizes a third party to act as its authorized 
agent in maintaining body camera recordings, then the authorized agent is not permitted 
to independently access, view, or alter any body camera recording, except to 
permanently delete the recording as required by law or agency retention policies. 
38-1-1006. 
(a)  If a law enforcement officer, employee, or authorized agent violates this part 
regarding the use of body cameras, fails to adhere to the access to recordings and 
retention requirements contained in this part or to any written policy enacted in 
compliance with this part, or intentionally interferes with a body camera's ability to 
accurately capture body camera recordings: 
(1)   
 (A)  The law enforcement agency shall take appropriate 
disciplinary action against the individual officer, employee, or agent; 
 (B)  The law enforcement agency shall adopt appropriate 
standards for sanctions of an officer or employee who violates this part; 
and 
 (C)  The law enforcement agency shall specify in a contract with 
an agent the disciplinary action that must take place if the agent violates 
this part;   
 
 
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(2)  A rebuttable evidentiary presumption must be adopted in favor of 
criminal defendants who reasonably assert that exculpatory evidence was 
destroyed or not captured; and 
(3)  A rebuttable evidentiary presumption must be adopted on behalf of 
civil plaintiffs suing the government, a law enforcement agency, or law 
enforcement officers for damages based on police misconduct who reasonably 
assert that evidence supporting the plaintiffs' claim was destroyed or not 
captured. 
(b)  The law enforcement agency shall adopt a written policy setting forth 
disciplinary action and procedures under subdivision (a)(1) in compliance with title 38, 
chapter 8, part 3, § 8-30-319, and any other applicable law. 
(c)  The rebuttable presumptions in subsection (a) may be overcome by contrary 
evidence or proof of exigent circumstances that made compliance with this part 
impossible. 
(d)  A body camera recording created in contravention of this or any other 
applicable law must be immediately destroyed and is not admissible as evidence in any 
criminal, civil, or administrative proceeding. 
(e)  This part does not contravene any laws governing the maintenance and 
destruction of evidence in criminal investigations and prosecutions. 
 SECTION 2.  This act takes effect upon becoming a law, the public welfare requiring it, 
and applies to recordings on or after that date.