The Berkeley Police Department moved its radio communications to encrypted channels on Thursday a little over a week after a controversial vote by the Berkeley City Council to allow the change.
Insistence on transparency in law enforcement has nothing to do with whether one likes or dislikes police officers. It comes ...
THE BERKELEY CITY COUNCIL voted 8-1 this week to restrict public access to the police department's real-time dispatch radio ...
Berkeley Police Department encrypted all radio channels Thursday at 5 a.m., citing safety issues. On Wednesday at its regular ...
Gov. Kathy Hochul should sign a bill on her desk that would preserve access to police radio transmissions for media ...
Beginning Monday, Nov. 3, the department is transitioning to encrypted radio transmissions to “enhance security and protect ...
After voting by the City Council, Berkeley joined the rest of Alameda County in encrypting police radio communications last ...
The approval came despite more than two dozen public commenters who objected to the proposal as well as the process of how it was placed on the City Council's consent calendar, which is a list of ...
Berkeley City Council voted 8-1 for encrypted police radio, citing privacy protection, raising transparency concerns.
Boulder’s police radios will no longer be available for curious minds and ears starting no later than Tuesday.
Gov. Kathy Hochul should sign bill requiring law enforcement to make encrypted communications available to news media and ...