明尼阿波利斯国土安全部官员将配备随身摄像机,诺姆宣布
更新于2小时前
更新时间:2026年2月2日,美国东部时间下午5:39
发布时间:2026年2月2日,美国东部时间下午5:24
美国边境巡逻队特工在明尼苏达州明尼阿波利斯的亨利·惠普尔主教联邦大楼站岗,摄于1月8日。
Charly Triballeau/法新社/盖蒂图片社/档案照
国土安全部部长克里斯蒂·诺姆周一宣布,所有派驻明尼阿波利斯一线的国土安全部官员将配备随身摄像机。
“即日起,我们将为明尼阿波利斯所有一线特工部署随身摄像机,”诺姆在社交媒体帖子中写道,“随着资金到位,该摄像机项目将在全国范围内推广。我们将迅速为国土安全部的执法人员全面配备随身摄像机。”
长期以来,支持和批评政府移民行动的人士都呼吁国土安全部官员(包括美国移民海关执法局和海关与边境保护局人员)佩戴随身摄像机。国土安全部官员有时会使用个人设备拍摄与抗议者的紧张互动场景。
其中最著名的案例是,一名开枪打死雷尼·古德的警官曾用手机拍摄了这一事件。
1月底两名警官开枪打死亚历克斯·普雷蒂后,调查人员开始查阅当天30多名警官佩戴的随身摄像机录像,以还原其死亡前的经过。
美国海关与边境保护局的内部调查在初步报告中(包括对随身摄像机录像的审查)发现,仅两名警官使用了武器。
上周,美国有线电视新闻网记者阿莱娜·特林询问白宫新闻秘书卡罗琳·利维特,为何在普雷蒂(一名重症监护室护士)被枪杀后,政府未要求国土安全部官员佩戴随身摄像机。
利维特表示相关讨论仍在进行中。“我会让他们和总统来做这个决定,”她补充道。
周一,唐纳德·特朗普总统称,他将把是否使用随身摄像机的决定权交给诺姆。
“嗯,这不是我的决定。我会……把它交给她,”总统表示,“随身摄像机对执法通常有好处,因为人们不能对发生的事情说谎……但如果她想这么做,我没问题。”
此外,诺姆宣布这一消息之际,参议院民主党人与特朗普已达成协议,将国土安全部资金临时延长两周,此前两党就民主党要求限制移民和海关执法局(ICE)战术的谈判陷入僵局。
该资金法案已在参议院通过,现在压力转向众议院共和党人。
在民主党继续提出改革或限制国土安全部移民官员战术的要求时,部分共和党人(甚至是政府移民执法的坚定支持者)也表示支持强制配备随身摄像机。
“我个人对此没有意见,”共和党参议员、参议院国土安全委员会成员罗恩·约翰逊周日接受美国有线电视新闻网达娜·巴什采访时表示。
约翰逊反对民主党提出的其他要求,包括在移民案件中强制要求司法令状。
“我们有数百万案件积压,”他说,“所以要求司法令状其实是他们暗中削弱我们执行移民法能力的手段。”
Homeland Security officers in Minneapolis will be issued body cameras, Noem says
By Holmes Lybrand | CNN Politics
Updated 2 hr ago
Updated Feb 2, 2026, 5:39 PM ET
PUBLISHED Feb 2, 2026, 5:24 PM ET
US Border Patrol agents stand guard at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 8.
Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images/File
All Homeland Security officers on the ground in Minneapolis will be issued body cameras, Secretary Kristi Noem announced Monday.
“Effective immediately we are deploying body cameras to every officer in the field in Minneapolis,” Noem wrote in a social media post. “As funding is available, the body camera program will be expanded nationwide. We will rapidly acquire and deploy body cameras to DHS law enforcement across the country.”
Advocates and critics of the administration’s immigration operations have long called for Department of Homeland Security officers — including from ICE and Customs and Border Protection — to wear body cameras. DHS officers themselves have resorted, at times, to filming tense interactions with protestors on their own personal devices.
One of the most well-known instances was when the officer who shot and killed Renee Good filmed the incident on his cellphone.
After two officers shot and killed Alex Pretti in late January, investigators began reviewing over 30 body cameras worn by officers that day to piece together what had taken place in the moments before his death.
Customs and Border Protection’s internal investigation found in it’s initial report, which included a review of the body worn camera footage, that only the two officers had fired their own weapons.
CNN’s Alayna Treene pressed White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt last week on why the administration had not required DHS officers to wear body cameras in the wake of the shooting of Pretti, an ICU nurse.
Leavitt said conversations were ongoing. “I’ll leave it to them and the president to make that decision,” she added.
President Donald Trump on Monday said he was leaving decisions regarding the use of body cameras to Noem.
“Well, it wasn’t my decision. I would have, you know — I leave it to her,” the president said. “They generally tend to be good for law enforcement, because people can’t lie about what’s happening … But if she wants to do that, I’m OK with it,” Trump said.
Noem’s announcement also comes after Senate Democrats and Trump brokered a deal to temporarily extend DHS funding for two weeks as Republicans and Democrats negotiations over demands on the left to rein in ICE tactics continue.
The funding bill has cleared the Senate, with pressure now on House Republicans.
As Democrats continue to outline their demands on reforming or curbing the tactics of DHS immigration officers, some Republicans — even staunch backers of the administration’s immigration enforcement — have voiced support for mandating body worn cameras.
“I don’t have a problem with that personally,” Republican Senator and member of the Senate’s homeland security committee Ron Johnson told CNN’s Dana Bash on Sunday.
Johnson said he opposes other efforts by Democrats, including to mandate judicial warrants in immigration cases.
“We have got millions of cases backlogged,” he said. “So demanding judicial warrants is their sneaky way of basically neutering our ability to enforce any immigration laws.”
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