Massachusetts
Massachusetts Police Bodycam Laws: Retention & Public Access

Massachusetts has no statewide law requiring police departments to use body cameras. Departments that adopt them generally follow the Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force's recommended regulations, and any footage that exists is subject to the state's public records law, M.G.L. c. 66, with mandatory privacy redactions before release.
This guide is part of our Police Bodycam Laws by State series. It covers whether Massachusetts departments must use bodycams, how long footage is kept, and how a member of the public can request a copy.
Jurisdiction scope: This article addresses Massachusetts law governing police-worn body cameras: department-level mandate status, the Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force framework, retention, and public records access under M.G.L. c. 4 and c. 66. It does not address whether a civilian may record an on-duty officer, which is a separate question covered in our guide on recording someone without consent.
Does Massachusetts Require Police to Wear Body Cameras?
No. Massachusetts has never enacted a statute compelling every police department to equip its officers with body cameras. The Legislature's major 2020 police reform law, chapter 253 of the Acts of 2020, created a Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force under section 104 rather than a mandate, and the task force's job was to write a uniform code that departments could follow if and when they chose to adopt the technology. As a result, whether a resident's local police department wears cameras still depends entirely on that department's own budget and policy decisions.
The Commonwealth has pushed adoption in other ways. The Massachusetts State Police, which has statewide jurisdiction, began issuing body cameras to troopers as part of a broader reform initiative first announced in 2018, and by the end of 2022 all of its roughly 2,200 sworn troopers had been equipped and trained. The Operational Services Division also maintains the PSE01 Public Safety Equipment statewide contract, which lets cities and towns buy bodycams, mounts, and evidence-management systems on pre-negotiated terms rather than mandating the purchase itself. Reporting from GBH found municipal police departments continuing to roll out programs through 2023 on this uneven, agency-by-agency timeline, with some cities well equipped and some small towns still without cameras.

When Must a Massachusetts Officer's Camera Be Recording?
Because no statute forces every department to use bodycams, there is also no single statewide activation rule written into the General Laws. Departments that adopt cameras set their own activation policy, guided by the Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force's recommended regulations, which call for departments to define specific triggers, such as calls for service, traffic stops, arrests, and use-of-force incidents, and to require officers to document any failure to activate. Because these are recommended regulations rather than a binding statute, the specific activation trigger language can vary from one department's policy to the next, and residents who want the exact rule for their town should check that department's published bodycam policy rather than assume a single state standard applies.
How Long Must Massachusetts Departments Keep Bodycam Footage?
The task force's framework sets a two-tier retention period. A recording that is not connected to a pending court proceeding or an open criminal investigation must be kept for a minimum of 180 days and a maximum of 30 months. A recording that is connected to a court proceeding is retained for as long as the court retains other evidence in that matter in the ordinary course, which can run well past 30 months.
The task force itself flagged this window as awkward in its 2022 final report, noting that the 30-month outer limit sits close to the three-year statute of limitations that applies to many civil claims, and recommending that lawmakers consider extending it to 37 months so that footage does not get destroyed before a potential lawsuit is filed. As of this writing, that recommendation has not been enacted, so the 180-day to 30-month range remains the operative guidance for departments that have adopted the task force's regulations.
| Massachusetts bodycam fact | Rule |
|---|---|
| Statewide mandate | None; local-agency discretionary |
| Governing framework | Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force recommended regulations (Aug. 2022), under St. 2020, c. 253, section 104 |
| Standard retention | 180 days minimum, 30 months maximum |
| Court-related footage | Retained as long as other case evidence |
| Default public-records status | Public, subject to redaction |
| Records response deadline | 10 business days (M.G.L. c. 66, section 10) |
Can the Public Get a Copy of Bodycam Footage in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts has not written a bodycam-specific access statute the way some other states have. Instead, footage is treated like any other government record under the state's general Public Records Law, M.G.L. c. 4, section 7, clause 26, and M.G.L. c. 66. A records access officer who receives a written request must respond within 10 business days under section 10 of chapter 66, either producing the record, explaining a fee or extension, or citing a specific exemption.
The most commonly used exemption for bodycam footage is clause 26(c), which shields "personnel and medical files or information" and any other materials whose disclosure "may constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." Massachusetts courts read that phrase narrower than the general privacy tort in M.G.L. c. 214, section 1B, which only reaches "unreasonable, substantial or serious" interference with privacy, meaning the public-records privacy exemption can block release even in some situations where a straight privacy lawsuit would not succeed. In practice, agencies commonly redact the faces or identifying details of minors, crime victims, bystanders inside a private residence, and people who appear in a medical or mental-health crisis, while releasing the substance of the encounter.
What Happens When an Officer's Camera Isn't Recording?
Because Massachusetts leaves activation and discipline policy to each department, there is no single state statute that penalizes an officer for failing to turn on a bodycam or for a camera that stops recording. That gap became visible in the 2021 Supreme Judicial Court case Commonwealth v. Yusuf, 488 Mass. 379 (2021). The court held that a Boston officer's decision to keep recording inside a home during a lawful domestic-disturbance response did not itself violate the Fourth Amendment or Article 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, because the camera only documented what the officer could lawfully see. But when a different unit later reviewed that same footage for an unrelated firearms investigation, without a warrant, the court ruled that review unconstitutional, comparing an unrestricted right to search through footage to the "general warrants" the Constitution's framers meant to prohibit.
The task force's recommended regulations direct departments to log and review any incident where a camera did not activate as required by policy, but enforcement of that logging requirement, and any discipline that follows, is left to the individual department rather than to state law.
Recording Police Versus Police Recording You
This article is about the opposite question from most of the recording-law content on this site. Massachusetts is a two-party consent state for private conversations, but that consent requirement governs civilians and others recording each other, not an officer's on-duty bodycam use, and it does not restrict a bystander's separate right to record police performing their public duties. For that question, see our guide on whether it's illegal to record someone without their consent.
Frequently asked questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Massachusetts police required to wear body cameras?
No. There is no Massachusetts statute requiring local police departments to use body cameras. Adoption is a department-by-department decision, though the Massachusetts State Police voluntarily equipped all of its troopers by the end of 2022.
How long does a Massachusetts police department have to keep bodycam footage?
Under the Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force's recommended regulations, footage not tied to a pending case must be kept for at least 180 days and no more than 30 months. Footage connected to a court proceeding is kept as long as other case evidence in that matter.
Can I request Massachusetts police bodycam footage as a public record?
Yes. Bodycam footage is generally treated as a public record under M.G.L. c. 66, and a records access officer must respond to a written request within 10 business days under section 10. The agency can withhold or redact portions that would be an unwarranted invasion of someone's privacy under M.G.L. c. 4, section 7, clause 26(c).
What gets redacted from Massachusetts bodycam footage before release?
Agencies commonly redact the identity of minors, crime victims, bystanders inside a private residence, and people shown during a medical or mental-health crisis, applying the personal-privacy exemption in M.G.L. c. 4, section 7, clause 26(c).
Can Massachusetts police review bodycam footage from your home for an unrelated case?
Not without a warrant. In Commonwealth v. Yusuf, 488 Mass. 379 (2021), the Supreme Judicial Court held that while an officer may lawfully record inside a home during a legitimate response, reviewing that recording later for an unrelated investigation requires a warrant.
Does every Massachusetts city and town have police body cameras?
No. Because there is no statewide mandate, coverage is uneven. Some departments, including the Massachusetts State Police, are fully equipped, while other municipal departments have adopted cameras more slowly or not at all.
Do Massachusetts police need my consent to record me with a bodycam?
No. Massachusetts' two-party consent wiretap law governs private conversations between civilians; it does not require an on-duty officer to obtain a subject's consent before activating a body camera during official duties.
Sources and References
- Session Laws, St. 2020, c. 253, section 104 (establishing the Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force)(malegislature.gov).gov
- M.G.L. c. 4, section 7, clause 26 (definition and exemptions to the Public Records Law)(malegislature.gov).gov
- M.G.L. c. 66, section 10 (public inspection and copies of records; 10 business day response)(malegislature.gov).gov
- M.G.L. c. 214, section 1B (right of privacy)(malegislature.gov).gov
- Commonwealth v. Yusuf, 488 Mass. 379 (2021)(masscases.com)
- Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force, Recommended Regulations for the Procurement and Use of Body Worn Cameras (Aug. 2022)(mass.gov).gov
- Law Enforcement Body Camera Task Force overview(mass.gov).gov
- "All 2,200 Mass. state troopers now have bodycams," Police1(police1.com)