Pimloc Appoints Leanne Moorhouse as Public Safety Lead to Strengthen Global Law Enforcement Engagement

Pimloc, an AI video privacy and analytics company, appointed Leanne Moorhouse as public safety lead. Moorhouse brings more than two decades of operational policing experience and is widely recognized as a global authority on body-worn video (BWV) governance, policy and deployment. Most recently, she served as the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) body-worn video subject matter expert, where she led the UK’s national BWV strategy and authored the country’s governing guidance on police use of body-worn video.
In her role at Pimloc, Moorhouse will help shape how the company’s privacy-first video technology is applied in real-world policing and public safety environments, informed by direct experience with how video moves through capture, review, disclosure and scrutiny across the criminal justice process. Her focus is ensuring privacy protections are operationally sound, legally defensible and fit for day-to-day policing.
“Public safety agencies are under growing pressure to unlock the value of video while meeting rising expectations around privacy, accountability and public trust,” said Simon Randall, CEO, Pimloc. “Leanne brings unmatched operational experience, having shaped national policy and worked directly with officers, leaders and government stakeholders. Her experience ensures that our technology continues to reflect the real-world realities of policing, both in the UK and as we support agencies globally, including across the U.S.”
As NPCC BWV lead, Moorhouse played a key role in identifying the operational burden created by manual redaction processes and became a leading advocate for scalable, privacy-by-design approaches that protect evidential integrity while reducing strain on officers and investigative teams. She also represented UK policing internationally, sharing best practices on governance, transparency and responsible video use.
“Having spent much of my career working at the intersection of frontline policing, national governance and public accountability, I’ve seen firsthand how critical it is to get privacy right,” Moorhouse said. “Video is essential to modern policing, but its value depends on how responsibly it is handled. Pimloc’s approach aligns with the operational realities I’ve lived, enabling agencies to share and analyze video while protecting the public, officers and the integrity of the justice process. I’m excited to help extend that approach globally, particularly as agencies in the U.S. and beyond face many of the same challenges.”
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