Providence Police Chief Hugh T. Clements Jr. said Friday that investigators were reviewing video from the officers and surveillance cameras in the area. Clements and Public Safety Commissioner Steven M. Par� told the Journal on Wednesday that videos from police body-worn cameras will always be released, at least within two weeks, in police shootings.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. -- The Providence Police will publicly release the video recorded by officers' body-worn cameras from the police shooting that left one man dead and a woman injured on Route 95 ramp Thursday.

Multiple Providence officers and Rhode Island State Police fired upon a white Ford F250 pickup that police and witnesses say had been driving erratically. The driver was killed, and the woman was critically injured; neither have been publicly identified.

Providence Police Chief Hugh T. Clements Jr. said Friday that investigators were reviewing video from the officers and surveillance cameras in the area. While he didn't specify when the police video would be released, both he and Public Safety Commissioner Steven M. Paré told the Journal on Wednesday that videos from police body-worn cameras will always be released in police shootings within two weeks of the incidents.

"Our officers will know if they're involved in an officer-involved shooting the video will be released," Paré said.

That's not the same with other incidents, where the police will determine on a case-by-case basis whether to release videos from body-worn cameras, Clements said.

However, the chief and commissioner said that police shootings were of public interest.

The Journal filed a request on Thursday under the state Access to Public Records Act for a copy of the recordings.

The department's policy requires that the cameras be turned on during pursuits. Any video involving a crime scene will be saved for the investigation.