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ckaihatsu
31st July 2011, 20:42
[LaborTech] 15 Years in Prison For Taping the Cops? How Eavesdropping Laws Are Taking Away Our Best Defense Against Police Brutality

AlterNet / By Rania Khalek
112 COMMENTS

15 Years in Prison For Taping the Cops? How Eavesdropping Laws Are Taking Away Our Best Defense Against Police Brutality
More and more people use their smartphones to record police misconduct. But laws against wiretapping are being used to intimidate and stop them.

http://www.alternet.org/rights/151806/15_years_in_prison_for_taping_the_cops_how_eavesdr opping_laws_are_taking_away_our_best_defense_again st_police_brutality?page=entire


July 27, 2011


Over Memorial Day weekend this past May, residents of Miami Beach witnessed a horrific display of police brutality as 12 cops sprayed Raymond Herisse's car with 100 bullets, killing him. The shooting provoked outrage in the surrounding community, not only because of the murder, but because of what the police did afterward.

Officers on the scene confiscated and smashed witnesses' cell phones; later, when they were confronted by the media, the police denied trying to destroy videos of the incident.

But 35-year-old Narces Benoit removed his HTC EVO’s SIM card and hid it in his mouth. He later sold the video to CNN, placing the police in the awkward position of explaining why they lied about allegations of cell phone destruction. More importantly, the video showed at least two officers pointing guns at Benoit, demanding that he stop filming.

Police brutality takes many forms around the country on a regular basis, particularly in poor and minority neighborhoods. Sometimes, the only method of accountability is a victim’s word (if they are still alive) against that of an officer. Unsurprisingly, the police officer’s version of the story is often adequate for a judge to dismiss allegations of wrongdoing, unless there is hard evidence of misconduct, such as a video or audio recording, which can be useful to unravel conflicting versions of police-citizen encounters.

Due to advancements in technology, the average citizen carries a digital camera in his or her pocket or purse, creating a potential army of amateur videographers on every street corner. A quick YouTube search of "police brutality" lists endless videos, often cell phone footage, of what appear to be police acting with unnecessary and violent force. Some of those videos have served a crucial role in bringing charges against brutality that may have gone unaddressed had it not been for bystanders recording.

One would think the fear of videographers on every block would be a powerful deterrent to police misconduct. However, legislatures are not taking this newfound power against police abuse lightly. In at least three states, it is illegal to record any on-duty police officer, even if the encounter involves you and may be necessary to your defense, and even if the recording is on a public street where no expectation of privacy exists. The legal justification is usually based on the warped interpretation of existing wiretapping or eavesdropping laws with statutes against obstructing law enforcement sometimes cited.

Illinois, Massachusetts and Maryland are among the 12 states where all parties must consent for a recording to be legal. Since the police do not consent, the camera-wielder can be arrested and charged with a felony. Most all-party consent states (except Illinois and Massachusetts) include a "privacy provision" that says a violation occurs only when the offended party has a reasonable expectation that the conversation is private. This is meant to protect TV news crews and people who record public meetings — where it is obvious to all that recording is underway — from accidentally committing a felony.

Massachusetts and Illinois are the only states that do not recognize an expectation-to-privacy provision to their all-party consent laws. While courts in Massachusetts have generally held that secretly recording police is illegal, recording them openly is not. Illinois, on the other hand, is the only state where the legislature specifically amended the state's wiretapping law to make it illegal to record on-duty police officers without their consent, even in public.

Cases Keep Piling Up

Recording on-duty police officers has gained momentum in states around the country for some time now. But it's only in the last few years, after several high-profile incidents, that the topic has begun to generate nationwide headlines and debate.

Two of these incidents occurred in Maryland last year, just weeks apart.

One involved Jack McKenna, who was arrested by Prince George's county police last March and charged with assault and resisting arrest when he was out celebrating the University of Maryland basketball victory over Duke. Fortunately for him, his fellow Terps fans happened to record the encounter on their cell phones, showing riot police throwing McKenna against a wall and beating him with batons. Once the videos appeared on the Internet, Prince George's County suspended the officers and dropped the charges against McKenna.

The second incident took place last April, when Maryland State Trooper David Uhler pulled over Anthony Graber for speeding and reckless driving. Graber had swerved across several lanes and did at least one wheelie on his motorcycle while driving 80mph. Graber had a video camera mounted to his motorcycle helmet that was recording at the time of the stop, and captured footage of Uhler, dressed in plainclothes while yelling with his gun in hand.

Although Graber was only given a traffic ticket, he posted the video on YouTube to publicize Uhler's threatening behavior. Maryland State police responded by raiding Graber's home, confiscating his computer and charging him with two felonies. One was for violating Maryland's wiretapping law by recording a trooper without his consent, and the other was for "possession of an intercept device," a provision intended for bugs and wiretaps but in this case referred to Graber's video camera. As a result, Graber faced up to 16 years in prison for recording a police officer during a public traffic stop.

Graber's case was ultimately dismissed, as are almost all of these cases, on the grounds that on-duty cops have no such expectation of privacy, which is in accordance with every court in the country that has considered the issue. Because there is no legal justification, the charges are usually dropped or never filed at all. But that doesn't stop the arrests. Radley Balko points out that, more often than not, police arrest photographers for obstructing law enforcement even in states that have no wiretapping law:


“In addition to arresting citizens with cameras for wiretapping, police can use vaguer catch-all charges, such as interfering with a police officer, refusing to obey a lawful order, or obstructing an arrest or police action. Such arrests are far more common. Even more frequent are incidents where police don’t make arrests but illegally confiscate cameras, delete photos and videos, or incorrectly warn camera-wielding citizens that they aren’t allowed to film.”

One such encounter took place earlier this year, when a California man, who recorded a police officer arresting someone at gunpoint down the street, found himself handcuffed as well. Lonell Duchine was videotaping the arrest on his cell phone from inside his garage, when an officer pulled up to his home and demanded the phone for evidence. Duchine refused, so the police officer arrested him, citing “police interference” for withholding evidence.

While illegal confiscation happens in a range of scenarios, from traffic stops to people's homes, the most famous example was on New Year’s day 2009, when Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) Officer Johannes Mehserle shot 21-year-old Oscar Grant at point-blank range, as he lay face down in an Oakland subway station, allegedly resisting arrest. The incident captured the nation's attention not simply because an unarmed black man was publicly killed by a white police officer, but also because dozens of onlookers captured it on their cell phones for the world to see.


In California, police are not permitted to confiscate a phone unless the phone was used in a crime. Nonetheless, after the incident BART police attempted to confiscate the phones of subway riders, and even chased one camera-wielder onto a subway car. Had a bystander not been equipped with his cell phone, charges may not have been brought against Mehserle, demonstrating the crucial role video recording can play in accountability. Since then there have been multiple incidents of police brutality recorded by cell phones, which may have otherwise gone unaddressed.

The most pernicious prosecutions to date have taken place in Illinois, where the sentence for recording a police officer is considered a class 1 felony — on par with a rape charge — and can land a person behind bars for more than a decade.

Tiawonda Moore from Chicago, Illinois, faces up to 15 years in prison for using her Blackberry to record two Internal Affairs investigators who spoke to her inside police headquarters. She was there last August to file a sexual harassment complaint against another officer, who she alleges had fondled her and left his personal telephone number when he was at her home investigating a domestic dispute. She says the police department actively discouraged her from filing a report, so out of frustration, she began to record the conversations on her phone. Although the case initially received national media coverage, attention has since died down as 21-year-old Moore awaits a trial date that continues to be pushed back.

Michael Allison is another Illinois resident facing the wrath of the eavesdropping law. The 41-year-old mechanic from Bridgeport faces four counts of violating the eavesdropping law, which adds up to a possible 75-year sentence. Allison believed the local police were harassing him in retaliation for a lawsuit he'd filed against the city over a local zoning ordinance, so he began to record his conversations with them.

Allison was eventually charged with violating the zoning ordinance. When he was told there would be no record of his trial, he informed court officials that he would record his trial with a digital recorder. This prompted the judge to have him arrested on the day of his trial, for violating her right to privacy. After confiscating Allison's digital recorder, the police found the recordings between Allison and the cops.

Christopher Drew, a 60-year-old artist and teacher, is also being prosecuted for violating the eavesdropping law. Drew was arrested in December 2009 for selling art without a permit on the streets of Chicago. He recorded his arrest, and now faces four to 15 years for documenting the incident.

These are just a handful of cases that illustrate the danger that comes with recording police in public. Carlos Miller, a journalist who has been arrested twice for photographing the police, has documented hundreds of similar cases on his blog, Photography is Not a Crime.

What Do the Police Think?

In the most comprehensive article to date about recording the police —" The War on Cameras" — Radley Balko interviewed James Pasco, executive director of the national Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), which describes itself as "the world's largest organization of sworn law enforcement officers." Pasco argues that videotaping police officers in public should be illegal because it can intimidate officers from doing their jobs. Mark Donahue, president of FOP, concurs, telling the New York Times that his organization “absolutely supports” the eavesdropping act and was relieved that the ACLU's challenge filed last year failed, adding that allowing the audio recording of police officers while performing their duty “can affect how an officer does his job on the street.”

Police officers are not a monolith, so while there are many, like Pasco and Donahue, who support these laws, there are also many who doubtless oppose them. At the same time, police apprehension about being videotaped on the job is understandable, especially with the advancement in cell-phone technology increasing at record speed. Some also worry that their actions will be preserved and used against them in ways that weren't possible just a few years ago, while others are simply uncomfortable being videotaped.

However, when considering recent developments in police surveillance, Pasco's argument is rather baffling. In stark contrast to the laws banning citizens from monitoring police misconduct with recording devices, police officers are equipped with top-of-line surveillance cameras in their cars and on their uniforms. According to a recent AP report, hundreds of police departments across the country are equipping officers with tiny body cameras to record anything from a traffic stop to a hot vehicle pursuit to an unfolding violent crime. The mini cameras have even spawned a new cable reality TV series, "Police POV," which uses police video from Cincinnati, Chattanooga and Fort Smith, Ark.

The cameras are intended to provide more transparency and security to officers on the street and to reduce the number of misconduct complaints and potential lawsuits. Which begs the question: what is the difference between these cameras and the footage captured by citizens in public? Why is it acceptable for police officers to record, but not citizens? Aren't the uniform and dashboard cameras, which unlike citizen recordings document police actions all through the day, intimidating police from doing their jobs, just as Pasco suggested?

Unconstitutional

Pasco goes on to suggest that we have to "put faith and trust in our authority figures," which is the absolute antithesis of a functioning democracy and the US constitution, which rests on transparency and accountability.

As usual, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has taken the lead in challenging these laws. In August of last year, the ACLU of Illinois filed a federal lawsuit in Chicago challenging the Illinois Eavesdropping Act (ACLU v. Anita Alvarez), arguing that the act violates the First Amendment and has been used to thwart people who simply want to monitor police activity, including the ACLU itself. The Illinois law is unique in that it makes it a crime to record not only private but also public conversations made without consent of all parties. In the lawsuit, the ACLU pointed to six Illinois residents who have faced felony charges after being accused of violating the state’s eavesdropping law for recording police making arrests in public venues.

Although the lawsuit was dismissed in January, the ACLU has appealed the suit and expects to begin making oral arguments sometime in the fall. Adam Schwartz, senior staff attorney with the Illinois Chapter of the ACLU, explained why the eavesdropping law is unconstitutional:

"The First Amendment protects the right to gather information for the purpose of sharing it with other people and for the purpose of using it to petition government for redress of grievances. And so for a long time courts have protected the right to record by various means what government officials are doing in public, so the press can publish that and so that citizens can use it to petition government.

"When we talk about police officers doing their jobs in public, we’re talking about very important government activity which is often used properly but sometimes is abused, and it’s very important that citizens have the ability to document what police are doing so they can seek improvement in police policy and the like… therefore, the first amendment protects the right to make audio-recordings of on duty police officers who are doing their jobs in public places."

Schwartz went on to compare audio-recording to other forms of documentation that, although less efficient, are not illegal:

"We believe that a police officer who is doing their job in a public place does not have an expectation of privacy. Even the police can see that if they’re arresting somebody on a corner, other people can watch….they don’t dispute that someone can stand a small distance away and watch, or that the person who’s watching can take out a pen and take notes or on what they’re seeing, or that they can take photographs of what they’re seeing or that they can make a silent video recording of what they’re seeing. The addition of the audio is a very powerful way for citizens to ensure that police officers are turning square corners."

Schwartz also emphasized that resolving disputing testimonies with citizen recording, while important, is not the only benefit to overturning the eavesdropping law:

"If police officers are doing their jobs in public places, for example policing a demonstration and something goes awry, it is very valuable for there to be a strong record, including audio of what happened, so that if there is a need to change the rules, the public can go to the government and say "look what happened, change the rules about how police officers are enforcing the peace at a political demonstration."

The court's decision in this case is said to be critically important in setting a precedent that will either protect or endanger newsgatherers‘ constitutional rights to monitor and record police misconduct. Schwartz said the ACLU is "cautiously optimistic" about the eventual ruling, which is expected to be handed down sometime in 2012.
Rania Khalek is a progressive activist. Check out her blog Missing Pieces or follow her on Twitter @Rania_ak. You can contact her at [email protected]

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The Douche
31st July 2011, 20:59
I have two friends who, about a year ago were arrested for filming instances of police brutality at a local concert, they were arrested and had their camera/phone seized. When I called the ACLU they told me "sorry", and didn't offer any further recourse, and expressed no interest in the events. They had a 5 minute phone conversation with me.

ckaihatsu
31st July 2011, 21:15
I have two friends who, about a year ago were arrested for filming instances of police brutality at a local concert, they were arrested and had their camera/phone seized. When I called the ACLU they told me "sorry", and didn't offer any further recourse, and expressed no interest in the events. They had a 5 minute phone conversation with me.


I hear ya...(!)

Maybe the venue had something to do with it -- ? (I don't know.) The article talks about the legal 'expectation of privacy' aspect, for audio recordings.

The Douche
31st July 2011, 21:17
I hear ya...(!)

Maybe the venue had something to do with it -- ? (I don't know.) The article talks about the legal 'expectation of privacy' aspect, for audio recordings.

It was a DIY venue, the owner of which was arrested in the raid. He certainly was not opposed to people taping the shows, or taping the police aggression.

ckaihatsu
31st July 2011, 21:22
Also, I'll note that, from a political standpoint, the *legal* aspect is *secondary*.

On a case-by-case basis I don't think anyone can be expected to make perfectly sound legal decisions beforehand about exactly what kinds of situations should be recorded and what shouldn't be. Obviously someone being persecuted for making a recording of a beating-in-progress should be afforded all the defense possible, from surrounding people and beyond.

ckaihatsu
31st July 2011, 21:23
It was a DIY venue, the owner of which was arrested in the raid. He certainly was not opposed to people taping the shows, or taping the police aggression.


Okay.

Red Commissar
31st July 2011, 21:23
I really think it is essential to oppose any attempts by the cops to criminalize people recording them or make such recordings inadmissible as evidence. I think anyone whose been on the wrong side of an abusive cop before, even over minor things, appreciates the importance of finding some way to keep them in check. They're already pretty hard to resist as it is, we can't let them solidify their cushy position even more.

Jose Gracchus
31st July 2011, 21:30
The ACLU has always been AWOL when it comes to cracking down on radicals; its a useful organization but ultimately liberal. Follow the donations; these people have no interest in standing up to class oppression, and so I'm not surprised they didn't feel like arrests at a DIY event were good enough for them.

Madslatter
1st August 2011, 08:23
The ACLU has always been AWOL when it comes to cracking down on radicals; its a useful organization but ultimately liberal.
The ACLU's lack of interest in these sorts of cases is particularly obnoxious considering the radical views held by a number of it's founders and how much of the organizations first couple years was spent defending socialists and anarchists.

Jose Gracchus
2nd August 2011, 17:50
They were pretty weak in fighting the Smith Act and McCarthyism against official Communism though, if I remember correctly.

maskerade
2nd August 2011, 18:27
This is certainly a worrying development. A few years ago back in Sweden a journalist/blogger saw two undercover cops roughing up a teenager, and when they saw him filming they told him it wasn't allowed. When he then reminded them that the Stockholm central station was public and filming was thus allowed, they threatened to arrest him for suspicion of being under the influence of narcotics. They then destroyed his iphone, but luckily he was able to extract the video.

And recently my pseudo-leftist friend got upset when I told him all cops are bastards.

RadioRaheem84
2nd August 2011, 18:44
This sucks, and it surprises me that the ACLU doesn't care. They'll fight for the right of neo-Nazis to march on the streets of Skokie, IL but not this?

PC LOAD LETTER
2nd August 2011, 19:00
I'm not surprised. I've been at the painful end of police brutality once before. I was 15 and walking down a sidewalk, talking to a friend. We both had skateboards, but we were holding them and hadn't gone onto any private property. Someone runs up behind me, grabs me by the hair and throws me head-first into the brick wall next to me, followed by a volley of punches to my face and ribs and screaming about skateboarding. When it stops and I get a look at who it was ... a police officer on foot. Who then promptly left when people started staring.

Waltraute
3rd August 2011, 00:35
and even chased one camera-wielder onto a subway car. Had a bystander not been equipped with his cell phone, charges may not have been brought against Mehserle, demonstrating the crucial role video recording can play in accountability. Since then there have been multiple incidents of police brutality recorded by cell phones, which may have otherwise gone unaddressed.

"demonstrating the crucial role video recording can play in accountability". should read "demonstrating the crucial role video recording can play in dismantling the modern state, by empowering and facilitating association and empowering individuals beyond the isolation of immediacy, and revealing the absurdity of police rule and the Stockholm Syndromeness of obeiscance to the latter" cell phones and digital cameras, i this case, are to communities the world over what rifles and pistols were to the Black Panther Party in the 70s: an essential to ensure justice and intimidate usurpers of reasonable human relations (ie., the police).

ckaihatsu
3rd August 2011, 06:44
California police shootings prompt popular outrage

By Juan Verala Luz and Kevin Kearney
3 August 2011

A string of police shootings in California in recent weeks have provoked popular outrage. On the evening of July 3, two BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) police officers responded to a report of an intoxicated man with an open container at the Civic Center BART station in San Francisco. Less than a minute after arriving at the platform, the officers had shot and killed 5’ 8”, 150-pound Charles Hill, a 45-year-old homeless man. Charles Hill is the third person killed by BART police in less than three years.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/aug2011/sfsh-a03.shtml

Decommissioner
3rd August 2011, 07:27
I am so disgusted by this.

I wish there was an easy or clear way to promote a culture of fearlessness, an attitude amongst the general public that makes the cops fear for their lives any time incidents like this happens - as opposed to the apologism that occurs not only from the state, but from the general populace.

t.shonku
3rd August 2011, 08:02
Thanks to Comrade Ckaihatsu for bringing the truth ! He has exposed the true face of America ! the so called “land of free”


Mrs Clinton better stop her rant against Iran, North Korea and China on grounds of human rights violation, it’s high time she start looking inside her own countries tyranny .


I have heard that in USA the air port security basically grabs pants and manhandles peoples , particularly Asians ? That is at least what Shahrukh Khan a famous Bollywood star had to say when he visited USA because he was stripped and searched , Muslims got angry because of this. What is TSA by the way? I have heard that they stripped searched famous wrestler Jesse Ventura



I have to agree with Dr Tarpley , America is indeed a Police State Patriot Act was just the beginning I am sure more tyranny are about to come

Waltraute
3rd August 2011, 09:41
TSA is a sex-offenders greatest source of employment

ckaihatsu
5th August 2011, 11:06
[icffmaj] POLICE BRUTALITY CONFERENCE IN MINNEAPOLIS, 9/23-25





Communities United Against Police Brutality
invites you and yours to

STRONGER UNITED

A National Discussion of Police Accountability
September 23-25, 2011
Minneapolis, MN

CUAPB, a Twin Cities police accountability organization, will hold a conference in Minneapolis in September 2011. It has been several years since a similar gathering has been organized and we feel it important to come together, discuss strategies, and find a renewed dedication to our work through the passion of others.

In response to our work, we are interested in discussions around:

Community alternatives to policing

Role of police in society

Attacks on cop watch(ers) and recent wiretapping chargers for recording police

The role and consequences of plea bargaining

How to connect victims' families toward mutual healing

TASER policies

Role of government-run accountability mechanisms

How to proactively prevent police brutality

But we want your input, too. What conversations and topics would you like to cover?


We have a few months to plan and organize, but we want this to be a particularly powerful meeting of voices, so we need to know your availability. The dates listed above are tentative.

Please RSVP to the dates listed above, and if you are interested in being a part of this conference but cannot travel that weekend, please suggest a weekend in September-October that would work for you and/or your organization. We will assess whether or not we should change the dates in coming weeks, so please let us know as soon as possible.

More details forthcoming.

Love and solidarity,
Communities United Against Police Brutality

bcbm
5th August 2011, 21:00
better not make fun of the cops either (http://www.dailytech.com/Police+Mock+us+in+Cartoons+go+to+Prison/article22362.htm)

praxis1966
5th August 2011, 23:10
I don't think it's unworthy of note here that the Mehserle/Grant case was something of an exception to the rule. What I mean is, I think the only reason that the cell phone recordings weren't confiscated and destroyed had to do with the "expectation of privacy" rule. The whole thing happened on a BART platform and all the amateur videographers were on BART trains... Both of which are rigged to the gills with security cameras.

If Grant had been shot 20 years ago (or even today in some inner city neighborhood where there aren't any other cameras around) when no such camera phone technology existed, there's no doubt in my mind that the BART security tapes would have been suppressed somehow (after all, we are talking about a privately run company)... But combine the security footage with the cell phones and there was no legal recourse for the police in question.

A Revolutionary Tool
5th August 2011, 23:58
Well it says in the OP that BART cops did try and confiscate the cell phones. But that would have been a little hard in and of itself considering all the people who caught it on camera and because it was a crowded BART train.

praxis1966
6th August 2011, 00:27
Well it says in the OP that BART cops did try and confiscate the cell phones. But that would have been a little hard in and of itself considering all the people who caught it on camera and because it was a crowded BART train.

Right, I was just talking more about the legalities of it. Never mind the physical difficulties of it.

ckaihatsu
5th September 2011, 12:19
[LaborTech] First Circuit Court of Appeals Rules that Citizens Can Videotape Police


First Circuit Court of Appeals Rules that Citizens Can Videotape Police

Tiffany Kaiser - August 31, 2011 1:33 PM

Print 67 comment(s) - last by JW.C.. on Sep 3 at 5:36 AM


(Source: mindseyenews.webs.com)


The filming of government officials while on duty is protected by the First Amendment, said the Court
http://www.dailytech.com/First+Circuit+Court+of+Appeals+Rules+that+Citizens +Can+Videotape+Police/article22587.htm

The First Circuit Court of Appeals reached a crucial decision last Friday allowing the public to videotape police officers while they're on the clock.

The decision comes after a string of incidents where individuals have videotaped police officers and were arrested. Police officers across the United States believed citizens didn't have the right to videotape them as they conducted official duties, but issues like police brutality put the issue up for debate.

One instance where a citizen was arrested for videotaping an officer was when Khaliah Fitchette, a law-abiding teenager from New Jersey, boarded a bus in Newark. Two police officers boarded the bus as well to remove a drunken man. Fitchette began taping the police officers because of how they were handling the man, and a police officer instructed her to stop recording them. When Fitchette refused, she was arrested and placed in the back of a cop car for two hours while the officers took her phone to delete the video. Fitchette was then released, but she and her mother then filed suit against the Newark Police Department with the New Jersey chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

Another example involves Simon Glik, a passerby on the Boston Common. He used his cell phone to tape police officers when the Boston police were punching a man. Citizens surrounding the scene were saying, "You're hurting him." Glik never interfered with the police officers' actions, but recorded the entire incident. The police officers ended up charging Glik with violating a wiretap statute that prohibits secret recording, even though the police officers admitted that they knew Glik was recording them. He was also charged with disturbing the peace and aiding the escape of a prisoner.

While all charges against Glik were dropped due to lack of merit, he still decided to join forces with the ACLU and file a civil rights suit to prevent a similar incident from occurring with others.

On Friday, August 26, 2011, the First Circuit Court of Appeals, which is New England's highest federal court just below the U.S. Supreme Court, ruled that citizens are allowed to videotape law officials while they conduct official duties.

The city's attorneys made the argument that police officers should have been exempt from a civil rights lawsuit in the first place in this case because the law is unclear as to whether there's a "constitutionally protected right to videotape police" conducting their daily duties in public.

"The filming of government officials engaged in their duties in a public place, including police officersperforming their responsibilities, fits comfortably within these principles [of protected First Amendment activity].," said the Court. "Gathering information about government officials in a form that can readily be disseminated to others serves a cardinal First Amendment interest in protecting and promoting the free discussion of governmental affairs."

The Court added that the police officers should have understood this all along, and that videotaping public officials is not limited to the press.

"Moreover, changes in technology and society have made the lines between private citizen and journalist exceedingly difficult to draw," the Court continued. "The proliferation of electronic devices with video-recording capability means that many of our images of current events come from bystanders with a ready cell phone or digital camera rather than a traditional film crew, and news stories are now just as likely to be broken by a blogger at her computer as a reporter at a major newspaper. Such developments make clear why the news-gathering protections of the First Amendment cannot turn on professional credentials or status."

The Court concluded that police officers are to expect to deal with certain "burdens" as citizens practice First Amendment rights, but that there needs to be a healthy balance between police officers being videotaped while acting irresponsibly and the harassment of officers with recording devices while they're conducting their duties responsibly.


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Madslatter
6th September 2011, 04:30
Good to see a ruling finally come against this, but lets not get too excited as the Supreme Court is likely to overturn this.

Klaatu
6th September 2011, 05:06
The solution to this is simple. Define cell phones/cameras/ etc as "arms" (in the fight against crime, brutality, and insurection) hence the U.S. Second Amendment comes into play. That is, the "Right to Keep and Bear Arms" does not necessarily have to be GUNS; this can be any 'weapon' which defends freedom. In short, a camera can be a "weapon" used in a defensive manner. And if the 2nd amendment holds true, people have the right to photograph state crime (not to mention that the First Amendment grants this right too)