Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said the city is considering having police wear body cameras in the fallout of Ferguson, Missouri.

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In the fallout from Ferguson, some have called for police to wear body cameras to take away the guesswork of what really happens when police and citizens interact.Mobile users tap here for videoOn Wednesday, Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said the city is considering exactly that kind of equipment.A video recorded by a camera worn by a Laurel police officer shows what he does, where he goes, and how he deals with the target of his traffic stop. It’s a very useful tool, Laurel police told the I-Team last November, if questions of officer misconduct arise."It's a way for an officer to prove kind of the events that occurred," Laurel police Officer Jessie Cunningham said.Laurel's been using the cameras since the spring of 2013, but few other departments are so equipped.Certainly not Ferguson, Missouri, where a grand jury is now sifting through conflicting witness statements in the police shooting of Michael Brown without the benefit of more impartial evidence such as video.In Baltimore, police are also without cameras, but maybe not for long."That's something we are taking a look at," Rawlings-Blake said.The mayor said Wednesday that her Office of Criminal Justice and the police department are considering the use of body cameras on police.Such cameras may have helped clarify the death of Tyrone West during a city police traffic stop last year, as well as in the chase of a suspect car that caused a triple fatal crash in the fall. This week, a camera would have shown where police were when a speeding car they'd tried to stop crashed and killed a 42-year-old man.While the cameras might show what happens, the mayor said she's concerned about privacy."You know 911 calls are public domain. If an officer responds to a house to, say, a domestic violence call, and they walk in the house with a camera on, I can certainly imagine where a survivor would not want that in the public domain, but if the officer was wearing it, it would have to be," Rawlings-Blake said.The Laurel Police Department's deputy chief told 11 News that video from a police camera isn't automatically released to the public. Requests are vetted by the city's lawyers.