Craft matters in small ways, like how coffee is made or how a wooden table is built piece by piece.
And in not so small ways, like how your money is cared for.
At UBS, we elevate investing to a craft.
We deliver our services with passion, expertise, and meticulous attention to detail.
This is what investing means to UBS, not just work, but a craft.
Discover more@ubs.com craft.
The value of investments may fall as well as rise, and you may not get back the amount originally invested.
From the New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is the daily a decade ago, police departments across the country began requiring officers to wear body cameras.
It was the single biggest change to come out of the police reform movement, a piece of technology that promised accountability in policing.
Today, the Times Magazine and the news organization ProPublica investigate what happened with that reform and why it has not lived up to its promise.
I spoke with Propublica's Eric Umansky.
It's Monday, January 29.
So, Eric, most of us have gotten pretty used to the idea that police officers wear body cameras on the job, right?
It's part of the uniform at this point, essentially.
And it was one of the big things to come out of the police reform movement over the last decade.
And activists had a lot of hope for these things.
You are an investigative reporter, and you have been looking into body cameras and the fate of body cameras as a reform.
When did you start becoming curious about them?
So it was in early 2023, January, actually.
There was a particularly horrific police killing in Memphis.