Albuquerque police officials say their policy for the use of body cameras is nearly impossible to follow, and they told The Albuquerque Journal that a new policy for the cameras would be put in place next year. “The officers, in certain situations, have a hard time complying with it,” Deputy Chief William Roseman said. The new policy, he added, will give officers “a little more flex so common sense can come into play.” The newspaper reported that since a new police chief took over in February, he disagreed with findings of the city’s Independent Review Officer 23 times, and that most of those disagreements involved whether officers had violated the camera policy. Under that policy, the police are required to record most interactions with the public in their entirety. The Albuquerque police have more than 700 cameras, one of the largest caches for a police department its size. The city recently signed an agreement with the federal Justice Department to overhaul the police force after more than 40 shootings since 2010.