This source library supports the Bend Surveillance Oversight public education series. It collects City materials, vendor documents, civil liberties research, government and technical sources, model oversight examples, and background reporting related to police technology, data retention, automated license plate readers, AI report-writing, vendor access, and public accountability.
The purpose of this page is simple: residents should be able to see the sources behind the claims. Some documents are already publicly linked. Others are marked Public copy pending until a public upload link is available.
How to use this source library
This page is organized by source type. City records and primary documents are listed first, followed by vendor materials, civil liberties and watchdog sources, government and technical reports, other-city examples, and background reporting.
For Bend-specific factual claims, official City documents and public records should carry the most weight. For policy analysis, civil liberties groups, technical reports, government materials, and reporting can help explain risks, safeguards, and oversight options.
This source library will be updated as additional public copies, final blog links, and public records become available.
1. Bend public records and City materials
Body-worn cameras and digital evidence storage
- April 7, 2021 Bend City Council Axon body-worn camera issue summary
- 8_Axon_Issue_Summary.pdf
- 8_Axon_Bend_PD_MSPA.pdf
- 8_Axon_Enterprises_Inc._Quote_Sales_Terms_and_Conditions.pdf
- 8_Axon_NASPO_ValuePoint_Cooperative_Master_Agreement_No._OK-MA-145-10.pdf
- 8_Axon_Oregon_Participating_Addendum_with_Taser.pdf
Fleet cameras
- City of Bend: Bend City Council approves fleet camera system for Bend Police vehicles
- July 20, 2022 Bend City Council fleet camera issue summary
- 5E_Police_Fleet_Cameras_-_Issue_Summary.pdf
- 5E_Police_Fleet_Cameras_-_Axon_Master_Services_and_Purchasing_Agreement_.pdf
- 5E_Police_Fleet_Cameras_-_Axon_Quote.pdf
- 5E_Police_Fleet_Cameras_-_First_Amendment_to_Master_Services_and_Purchasing_Agreement.pdf
- 5E_Police_Fleet_Cameras_-_Notice_of_Intent_to_Award_a_Contract.pdf
- 5E_Police_Fleet_Cameras_-_NASPO_ValuePoint_Cooperative_Master_Agreement_No._OK-MA-145-15.pdf
- 5E_Police_Fleet_Cameras_-_Oregon_Participating_Addendum.pdf
Fusus / real-time information platform
- March 15, 2023 Bend City Council agenda — Fusus item
- 5C_Fusus_-_Issue_Summary.pdf
- 5C_Fusus_-_Quote.pdf
- 5C_Fusus_-_Service_Agreement.pdf
- 5C_Fusus_-Terms__Conditions_-_August_2022_COB_021423.pdf
Axon Air / drone software
- February 7, 2024 Axon Air issue summary
- 5M_Axon_Air_-_Issue_Summary.pdf
- 5M_Axon_Air_-_Quote_13566.96.pdf
- 5M_Axon_Air_-_Quote_96502.28.pdf
- 5M_Axon_Air_-_NASPO_ValuePoint_Cooperative_Master_Agreement_No._OK-MA-145-15.pdf
- 5M_Axon_Air_-_State_of_Oregon_Participating_Addendum.pdf
Axon bundled contract / Officer Safety Plan
- October 2, 2024 Bend City Council meeting minutes
- October 2, 2024 Axon Technologies Contract presentation
- 5F_Axon_Standards_Public_Notice_Cooperative_Procurement._9.27.23.pdf
- 5F_Axon_Standrads_Quote.pdf
- 5F_Axon_Statement_of_Work.pdf
- 5M_Q-485046-45315.919TS-_Contracts_language_updated_R1.pdf
Automated traffic enforcement
2. Vendor documents and product materials
- Axon Cloud Services Privacy Policy
- Axon Draft One product page
- Axon fixed ALPR and real-time public safety ecosystem press release
- Axon main product site
3. Civil liberties, watchdog, and advocacy sources
- EFF: Street-Level Surveillance
- EFF: Automated License Plate Readers
- EFF: Automated License Plate Readers case page
- EFF: Beware the Bundle
- EFF: Axon’s Draft One Is Designed to Defy Transparency
- EFF: Anchorage Police Department — AI-Generated Police Reports Don’t Save Time
- ACLU: Community Control Over Police Surveillance
- ACLU: Community Control Over Police Surveillance Model Bill
- ACLU: CCOPS Technology 101 primer
- Brennan Center: Automatic License Plate Readers — Legal Status and Policy Recommendations
- Policing Project: Axon AI Ethics Board ALPR Report
- Policing Project: Axon AI Ethics Board Facial Recognition Report
- Policing Project: Statement of Resigning Axon AI Ethics Board Members
4. Government, legal, and technical sources
- Congressional Research Service: Facial Recognition Technology and Law Enforcement
- NIST: Face Recognition Vendor Test Part 3 — Demographic Effects
- NIST PDF: Face Recognition Vendor Test Part 3 — Demographic Effects
- NIST demographic effects overview page
5. Other city examples and oversight models
- Austin TRUST Act resolution backup document
- FOX 7 Austin: Austin City Council passes TRUST Act
- CBS Austin: Austin City Council to act on surveillance technology
- City of Mountain View statement on ALPR data access
- Mountain View Voice: unauthorized access to license plate data
- Local News Matters: Mountain View police allege unauthorized federal use
- KOLD: Pima County supervisors reject $45 million AI contract
- KJZZ: No AI report-writing software for Pima County Sheriff
- C&G Newspapers: Ferndale to work on policies to strengthen ALPR camera oversight
6. Background reporting and investigations
- EFF press release: AI product for police reports designed to hinder audits
- Alaska Public Media: Anchorage police not moving forward with using AI to write reports
- GeekWire: Prosecutor tells Seattle-area law enforcement not to use AI for police reports
- Fair and Just Prosecution: AI-Generated Police Reports — High-Tech, Low Accuracy, Big Risks
- Wired: bipartisan amendment would curb police license plate tracking nationwide
7. Source notes and methodology
This source library uses different types of sources for different purposes.
- Official City materials are used for Bend-specific claims about agendas, contracts, costs, approvals, issue summaries, and program descriptions.
- Vendor documents are used to understand product descriptions, terms, privacy policies, cloud services, AI tools, ALPR products, and software ecosystems.
- Civil liberties and watchdog sources are used for policy analysis, risk framing, model safeguards, and public accountability recommendations.
- Government and technical sources are used for legal, technical, biometric, and accuracy issues.
- News reporting is used for other-city examples and current developments, especially where official records are not yet included.
Some entries are included as background or policy framing, not as proof that Bend currently uses a particular feature. For example, sources about ALPRs, facial recognition, AI report-writing, or federal data access may explain oversight concerns even where Bend-specific use has not been confirmed.
Where a claim is uncertain, the public series should use careful wording such as “could,” “may,” “depending on configuration,” “reporting indicates,” or “Bend should clarify whether.”
8. Documents still awaiting public upload
The following categories remain marked Public copy pending until public links are available:
- Additional public records request materials
- Any Verra Mobility or automated traffic enforcement documents beyond the uploaded Presentation, Quote, and Security Addendum
- Any additional Axon, Fusus, or City files that are referenced later but not yet uploaded to the Media Library
Related series
This page supports the Bend Surveillance Oversight public education series. The full guide and all ten posts are now available.
- What Bend Residents Should Know Before Police Surveillance Expands
- This Is Not Just About Cameras
- What Police Technology Has Bend Already Considered or Purchased?
- Why Vendor Lock-In Matters in Police Technology Contracts
- What Happens to the Data?
- AI Police Reports and the Audit Problem
- ALPRs: License Plate Scans Are Location Records
- Why Federal and Third-Party Sharing Matters
- Other Cities Are Already Asking Better Questions
- What Reasonable Safeguards Would Look Like in Bend
- Questions Bend Residents Can Ask Council
