Pimloc Appoints Leanne Moorhouse as Public Safety Lead
Leanne Moorhouse joins the AI video privacy company to help agencies manage body-worn video operations, privacy and transparency at scale.
- By Jesse Jacobs
- Mar 10, 2026
Pimloc, an AI video privacy and analytics company, has appointed Leanne Moorhouse as public safety lead to oversee the company’s engagement with global law enforcement agencies.
Moorhouse joins the company with more than 20 years of operational policing experience. She most recently served as the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) body-worn video subject matter expert. In that role, she led the national strategy for the United Kingdom and authored the governing guidance for police use of body-worn cameras.
At Pimloc, Moorhouse will focus on the application of privacy-first video technology in public safety environments. Her work will involve ensuring that privacy protections are legally defensible and operationally viable throughout the criminal justice process, from initial capture to public disclosure.
"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 of Pimloc. "Leanne brings unmatched operational experience, having shaped national policy and worked directly with officers, leaders, and government stakeholders."
During her tenure with the NPCC, Moorhouse advocated for privacy-by-design approaches to manage the operational burden created by manual redaction processes. She has also represented U.K. policing interests internationally to share best practices on governance and responsible video use.
"Video is essential to modern policing, but its value depends on how responsibly it is handled," Moorhouse said. "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."
The appointment comes amid increased adoption of the company’s Secure Redact platform. The system uses automated detection to anonymize personally identifiable information in video and audio files, allowing agencies to share evidence for investigations and transparency requirements while maintaining compliance with privacy regulations.