All I expect is accountability. I would be perfectly satisfied with them having to wear gopros that cannot be shut off or manipulated, which upload video via wireless.
Not sure this is enough. You make it 100% illegal for cops to be unionized. You attach a gopro to their chest, and turning off the camera or deleting content from it carriers prison time and a ban from ever working in a law enforcement position again. You make it so complaints against cops don't go through the cops themselves - you make the IA department a separate entity. You make the cops files open to the public (though not the videos as they will contain private info.) You randomly review videos from officers and proactively issue warnings/take pay/suspend/fire/prosecute them.
You remove laws saying cops cannot be prosecuted while working in the line of duty.
And above all, if a cop is ever deemed to have broken the regulations governing the officers and they are fired, that means they are banned from being a cop *ever* again, in *any* state and cannot even be a rent-a-cop.
This isn't hard to figure out - as it stands, cops can basically act with impunity. Another case that sticks in my mind is from Canton, OH: OH is a duty to notify state if you are carrying a firearm. During a traffic stop, a driver attempts numerous times to notify, and is told to shut up or be arrested. When he finally manages to shove his CPL in the officer's face, the officer says "I should shoot you right now you fucker, you don't deserve to live." The citizen was arrested and charged. Once the video was subpoenaed, charges were dropped. Officer had numerous complaints about brutality filed against him before...and still serves.
Another one where the cops were caught ON TAPE saying how they were going to write the report and how they'd lie:
http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/20...20327_1_tow-truck-criminal-charges-flat-tires
You really don't have to look very hard to find this stuff. I see at least one report of police misconduct a week without even looking.