Casper Police Test AI for Body Camera Reviews, Reports

It wasn’t that long ago that Larry Ellison was talking about citizens being on their best behavior because of AI with AI reviewing police body cameras, and it’s already happening. And this agentic AI service is provided by Amazon Bedrock, and is pretty expensive, How much will the city payout for people arrested on AI hallucinations? The Mark of the Beast system is inbound, as they’re going to tie all of the AI systems together. And the statement that AI isn’t being trained is bogus, as the system retains information it processes, as it’s really a surveillance platform.

https://oilcity.news/community/city/2026/06/25/casper-police-test-artificial-intelligence-for-body-camera-reviews-reports/

By Oil City Staff

Casper Police Department Sgt. Chris Henry speaks to local residents at a Thursday town hall. (Tommy Culkin, Oil City News)

CASPER, Wyo. — The Casper Police Department has started testing artificial intelligence technology to review body-worn camera footage and help officers write police reports.

The department is piloting a platform called TRULEO, which converts audio from body camera recordings into text to help supervisors inspect interactions. The pilot program also features an automated tool that organizes an officer’s notes into a structured draft report.

“Our goal is not to replace the judgment or experience of our people,” Casper Police Chief Shane Chaney said. “It is to give officers, supervisors and telecommunicators better tools to understand their work, identify opportunities for improvement and spend more time serving the public.”

Department leadership will make all decisions regarding training, coaching and accountability, and actions will not be based solely on automated data. Officers remain responsible for reviewing and approving every report before submission.

A similar quality assurance tool is already in use at the Casper-Natrona County Public Safety Communications Center to review emergency and non-emergency calls. To address privacy concerns, the department said body camera footage will not be used to train the platform’s AI models.