Slashdot Mirror


Recording the Police

Bruce Schneier says "I've written a lot on the 'War on Photography,' where normal people are harassed as potential terrorists for taking pictures of things in public. This article is different; it's about recording the police: Allison's predicament is an extreme example of a growing and disturbing trend. As citizens increase their scrutiny of law enforcement officials through technologies such as cell phones..."

121 of 515 comments (clear)

  1. In Soviet Russa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Police deports your first post to siberia.

    1. Re:In Soviet Russa by FooAtWFU · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Police deports your first post to siberia.

      Hey! My grandmother was deported to Siberia, you insensitive clod!!

      No. Really. I'm 100% serious. Not kidding at all. Her father was a bit of a hero during the earlier Polish-Bolshevik war - a little effort near the village of Ladycyzn (which I think is now in the Ukraine and called something else) where some big machine gun caissons had overturned so he went into the village to recruit some help and subsequently saved a good chunk of the Polish cavalry when they came high-tailing it back west in retreat. Naturally, as a totalitarian regime I suppose you wouldn't want that sort of guy around when you're occupying a country, retired or otherwise. Same for the family.

      I understand she totally freaked everyone out when she and her sister visited, showed up in town again 60 years later. Think "really tiny small rural nowhere farming village". But I digress. Carry on, gentlemen.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
  2. Rule of Law by digsbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The arbitrary application of existing, irrelevant laws to cover actions which the powers that be find convenient to criminalize offers proof that the rule of law is dead, that people are afraid to speak and act against it, and that we now have rule by force. It will take conscientious effort by a large part of the population to peacefully reverse this disturbing trend.

    1. Re:Rule of Law by blair1q · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It will take conscientious effort by a large part of the population to peacefully reverse this disturbing trend.

      But that is the rule of law. It only wouldn't be if you couldn't do that under the law.

      The rule of law also includes your right to question the actions of the police before a judge.

      And many jurisdictions have official boards of citizens who listen to complaints about the police and can cause much grief to the police hierarchy if the rank-and-file are abusing their badges.

      But that doesn't stop perps who get their necks stepped on from shouting "police brutality!" even though they deserve it.

    2. Re:Rule of Law by Hatta · · Score: 5, Informative

      It stops being the rule of law and becomes the rule of man when you cannot punish the prosecutor for abusing his power.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:Rule of Law by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 3, Informative

      Most citizen review boards are rubber stamps for the police leadership, exonerating police brutality and OKing police shootings.

    4. Re:Rule of Law by MozeeToby · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Targeted application of laws which are not generally enforced should be the most terrifying thing in the world to you if you worry about a police state evolving. The general lack of enforcement means that the public is unaware and/or unconcerned about the law, meaning penalties can be stiff, and that violations are common because the general public doesn't know any better. The upshot being that nearly anyone the police or judiciary doesn't like can be thrown into prison for decades, which is practically the definition of a police state, and the scary thing is that it already exists in the good old US of A. The wiretap laws are hardly the most commonly used for this purpose, but the ridiculous penalties (can easily be 100 years in prison if you have multiple offenses) make it one of the most terrifying.

    5. Re:Rule of Law by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 5, Informative

      Last city I lived in with alot of police shootings of civilian non suspects was Portland Oregon.

      Where we have things like the police shooting unarmed people in the back.

      http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2010/11/family_of_aaron_campbell_files.html

      "Campbell, 25, was shot in an apartment parking lot in North Portland. Police had been called to the scene on a report of a suicidal man who was armed. Campbell came out of the apartment with his hands behind his head, walking backward toward police, witnesses said. Police, who said he ignored commands to put his hands up, hit him with six beanbag rounds. Frashour then hit him in the back, firing the fatal shot with his AR-15 rifle. The officer said he saw Campbell reaching with both hands toward the back waistband of his pants and thought he might be reaching for a gun."

      But I'm sure to you everyone is a "perp".

    6. Re:Rule of Law by scot4875 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And most people are bloodthirsty bastards who make snap judgments and love to see police beatings (see: Cops) and would happily have public hangings for even minor offenses without a moment's thought.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    7. Re:Rule of Law by NFN_NLN · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Targeted application of laws which are not generally enforced should be the most terrifying thing in the world to you if you worry about a police state evolving. The general lack of enforcement means that the public is unaware and/or unconcerned about the law, meaning penalties can be stiff, and that violations are common because the general public doesn't know any better. The upshot being that nearly anyone the police or judiciary doesn't like can be thrown into prison for decades, which is practically the definition of a police state, and the scary thing is that it already exists in the good old US of A. The wiretap laws are hardly the most commonly used for this purpose, but the ridiculous penalties (can easily be 100 years in prison if you have multiple offenses) make it one of the most terrifying.

      Parent is absolutely right. I think the rule should be that ALL laws are applied in order of their severity at all times.

      If there was a stupid law about being drunk in public and everyone who walked from a bar into a cab got a ticket during that 5ft walk... I bet the laws would be changed in a hurry. Yet, as it stands, a cop can selectively apply these ridiculous laws to effectively harass anyone they want.

      The only way laws change is if the general public stands up to them. If they cherry pick people to abuse then they mostly go unnoticed.

    8. Re:Rule of Law by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 2

      And look at Officer Bubbles. The fucker doesn't even know the difference between assault and battery.

      I mean, dustiest table in Pompeii, but still, it's a basic split in law.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    9. Re:Rule of Law by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "

      But I'm sure to you everyone is a "perp".

      I am not a cop, but I am dating one. Having done ride alongs I understand the other side of this. It really sucks when a you are not sure a perp has a gun or not - and sometime they do - and sometimes cops get shot.

      When a suspect does not obey orders, and could potentially be going for a weapon, Cops get scared. Abuse of authority? Perhaps. Reasonable justifiable fear? YES.

      Some cop shootings are justified, some are not. Cops are people. People get scared. Somehow people seem to think that Cops have this mythical "spidey sense" and they can just know what is actually going on and judge the situations accordingly. They don't. They also, unfortunately spend a great deal of time if working on patrol dealing with lots of people who are belligerent and dangerous.

      Unfortunately, this makes them jaded.

      Are there bad cops? Yes. Just as there are good and bad people. Cops are people. People make mistakes.

      Having said all that, if my GF was involved in a shooting, I would much rather it be her who pulled the trigger. Not the perp.

      --
      Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
    10. Re:Rule of Law by laron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How would you stop a sober moron from doing the same?

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
    11. Re:Rule of Law by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 2

      How about make laws that target the behavior and not the condition of the person doing the behavior?

      So would it be ok if I wandered into the streets or yelled at passer-bys while stone cold sober?

      I now have an arrest record from college. West Lafayette likes to selectively enforce the Public Intoxication laws. No other college student I've talked to from any where else has laws like this. Heck some states such as Nevada it's actually illegal to be prosecuted for being drunk in public.

      And of course everyone who reads about my arrest will assume I was doing something incredibly stupid or "deserved it".

      Nope. Left a bar before my friends. Fell asleep on the park bench on the way home. Tada. 12 hours in jail (From the time of booking). ~$300 in court fees. ~$500 lawyer fees. 1 year probation during which time I can not enter any bar or tavern. Consume any alcohol. Etc.

      Letter of the law in Indiana is 0.08. I guarantee if they arrested every single person that walked out of a bar and blew 0.08, the court system would be over run.

      And they would never do the responsible thing and just pick people up and toss them in a drunk tank for the night no arrest. That wouldn't bring any $$ in for the county. This way they've gotten nearly $1k fed into the local economy. Figure 10-20 a weekend, 30+ on very big weekends (home coming). That's easy cash.

    12. Re:Rule of Law by sideslash · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Having said all that, if my GF was involved in a shooting, I would much rather it be her who pulled the trigger. Not the perp.

      Of course you would prefer that. And the family of the individual who was shot would prefer the other outcome. This is not about emotions.

      If policemen/women shoot people for inappropriate reasons, they need to answer for it in criminal court, the same as anybody else. What's unfortunate is that we see lying and coverups that sometimes happen among "brother officers" to cover each other's backs -- a real shame. That's where citizen recording can promote justice and help fix the system.

    13. Re:Rule of Law by Hatta · · Score: 2

      No kidding. Here in Omaha we had an independent police auditor. She had the audacity to actually do her job, and issued a report saying that the Omaha Police disproportionately pull over black people. The mayor promptly fired her and eliminated the position.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    14. Re:Rule of Law by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree. However, many civilians watching some of the tapes draw inappropriate conclusions regarding the outcomes.

      They pass judgments on the officers without the proper context.

      That's what trials are for. If the jury is leaping to conclusions, have your defense attorney provide the proper context. If it's good enough for citizens, it's good enough for cops.

      I don't know if the need for a criminal court is always needed

      Yes, always. The review boards do nothing but whitewash criminal conduct. A cop should go through the same process as everyone else. If it's a justifiable shooting, you can present that as a defense. Oh, and cops should be required to use public defenders. Again, if they are good enough for us, they're good enough for everyone else.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Rule of Law by mdmkolbe · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Remember "perp = perpetrator != suspect != citizen". It's all right to refer to the "perpetrator of a crime" as a fill in the blank when you don't know who did the crime, but when referring to an actual person, they are at best a suspect. And only if you actually suspect them of committing a crime.

      I know "perp" sounds cool, but if used improperly it is prejudicial to justice.

    16. Re:Rule of Law by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 2

      "

      When a suspect does not obey orders, and could potentially be going for a weapon, Cops get scared

      Cops get "scared" because they refuse to even consider the possibililty that the suspect is deaf, wearing ear plugs, or doesn't speak the same language as the cops. Deaf people get beat up and shot all the time for "not following a cop's orders". Get a clue.

      Cops get beat up and shot all the time for trying to be nice and lenient. Get a clue.

      --
      Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
    17. Re:Rule of Law by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 2

      Cops are people. People get scared. Somehow people seem to think that Cops have this mythical "spidey sense" and they can just know what is actually going on and judge the situations accordingly.

      Cops are held to a higher standard. That's supposed to come along with those special rights and weapons they're given. They should not be as uncertain and scared in situations like that as the rest of us. If they want to be as scared and trigger-happy as the rest of us "people" then they shouldn't be allowed to kill someone any more then the rest of us "people".

    18. Re:Rule of Law by Hatta · · Score: 3

      The question that raises would we have more dead cops if they worried about trials even when they feel justified?

      Would we have more dead civilians if cops aren't worried about being punished for shooting inappropriately?

      Would a jury of their peers be valid given that the peers would be civilians?

      Peers, in 18th century speak, means "not nobility". The phrase is a carry over from the Magna Carta, and doesn't mean much in America where there are no nobles. At least in theory, we are all equal in the eyes of the law.

      I am not saying I don't think courts and trials for shooting are a bad idea - on the contrary - but I am wondering how we come up with a situation where we can ensure fairness for everyone involved. I am not entirely convinced at this point that a trial jury is the right option yet.

      Put the cops through the same legal system everyone goes through. That way the cops have incentive to make the process as fair as possible.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    19. Re:Rule of Law by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 2

      Cops are people. People get scared. Somehow people seem to think that Cops have this mythical "spidey sense" and they can just know what is actually going on and judge the situations accordingly.

      Cops are held to a higher standard. That's supposed to come along with those special rights and weapons they're given. They should not be as uncertain and scared in situations like that as the rest of us. If they want to be as scared and trigger-happy as the rest of us "people" then they shouldn't be allowed to kill someone any more then the rest of us "people".

      They should not be as uncertain and scared in situations like that? What? Are you suggesting Cops should be sociopaths?

      How about this example - near my GF's house, 4 officers were shot in cold blood in a coffee house. They were drinking coffee. The assailant got away, and the assailant was known to have the "death by cop" wish. One of the dead officers was a friend of hers.

      Think about that - some people want to die, so their solution is "death by cop" because they don't have the will to just commit regular suicide.

      The assailant got away - and he had one of the guns from one of the officers.

      My GF was afraid to leave the house to get into her patrol car - she did - that was her job. But how did she know that just leaving her house in uniform to get into her work car she could just be shot in cold blood by a person like that?

      Are you telling me that things like that don't affect some one? Are you telling me that she should feel just "normal" like you and me while leaving her house - or even being at home? What if the attacker saw her come home, and waited to kill her later when she wasn't in uniform?

      As it was, the attacker was killed shortly thereafter - in a justified shooting no less.

      At another point, a friend of hers stopped by and chatted with her while they were on patrol - half an hour later that officer was shot and killed by an assailant - one block from where they chatted. My GF saw the killer before it happened, and if she had stopped the killer instead of the other officer, she would be the one who would have died.

      This stuff affects people. The only people it does not change are not the kind of people I want to be cops!

      But the point is this - there are people out there who just want to kill cops because "cops ain't like us". Think of the psychological effect that has on a person. Now think about the fact that most cops want to do a good job, and do their job well. Stuff like this has an effect on people.

      There are no easy answers to these kind of problems.

      --
      Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
    20. Re:Rule of Law by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 2

      Are you suggesting Cops should be sociopaths?

      No. I'm suggesting they should be less scared in situations like that.

      Are you telling me that things like that don't affect some one?

      no. I'm saying they should affect cops less. While that situation should scare your GF, she should not blow someone's face off right after that because they put their hand in their pocket while walking past your house.

      This stuff affects people. The only people it does not change are not the kind of people I want to be cops!

      So instead we settle for cops blowing someone's head off because they moved their hands in the wrong direction?

      But the point is this - there are people out there who just want to kill cops because "cops ain't like us".

      Well of course there are people who don't like cops (to one extent or another). Cops frequently get away with doing bad things that "people like us" don't. Having actual consequences for their screwups (or arresting someone because they took their picture in a public place) like the rest of us might improve the situation.

    21. Re:Rule of Law by abulafia · · Score: 2

      Sometimes people get shot while fleeing - but the impulse to shoot takes 2-3 seconds to enable, and once it has begun, the officer will probably end up shooting, even if the perp has turned to flee in the time that the decision was made to shoot.

      I think what you may be missing is that the desired outcome is not some sort of rules of engagement under which we accept, or not, the deaths of people that shouldn't have been killed. The goal is to minimize the number of times the cops entrusted (and paid by) regular people get shot, tortured and killed by the cops.

      There is a place for considering justification, considering reaction speed, etc. and that is a court (even if courts really suck at a lot this; this is how we do it, and that's even less mutable than other things).

      But true friends of cops should be considering how to make unjustified actions taken by cops happen less often. This includes training (for all sorts of things, including teaching people away from the panic effect you refer to if at all possible), policy (knowing when not to pull the fucking gun, not encouraging the use of tasers as a substitute for keeping one's temper, knowing when not to pursue, many others), leadership changes (at least in some cities, get away from promotion by statistics, as just one of many problems), tactical changes (there's a lot of evidence that beat cops that know their territory have much more positive effects on crime than rovers that swoop in), intelligence changes (you're sick of parentheticals, and so am I), and so on.

      But really, the low-hanging fruit are the cops that shake people down, work with dealers to entrap, eat steroids and freak out under stress, have personality problems that make them react poorly, and so on. And there are a lot of those that lead to marginal cases that never see the light of day because of slack in the judicial system. I'm not even talking about "shortcuts to get a bad, bad man", I'm talking illegal behavior on the part of cops that is routinely excused. There is a lot of it that doesn't rise above the baseline noise.

      We should not tolerate it. I don't care if it is the blue line, or stickers on the car that lead to warnings, or a judge ignoring excessive force, or worse.

      Watch the watchers.

      --
      I forget what 8 was for.
    22. Re:Rule of Law by DavidTC · · Score: 2

      How would you stop a sober moron from doing the same?

      If you do that enough to annoy 'the public', you're a 'public nuisance'.

      Laws that punish people for merely being drunk in public are idiotic. As long as they aren't endangering themselves or others, or doing the sort of stuff that should get them locked up anyway, like wandering up and down the street yelling at people, the idea that they should be punished is absurd.

      Frankly, there are some constitutional issues there the court needs to look into WRT to outlawing drunkenness. You have a right to be in public, it's called 'the right to peaceable assemble'. You do not lose that right simply because you are drunk.

      Likewise, you also have the 'right to movement', which is not in the constitution but the courts have constantly upheld exists. You have the right to move from place to place, which is usually applied on a larger scale, like the right to actually relocate and travel from one state to another, but you have to also have the right to move from one place to a place down the street. (Or you couldn't do larger moves.)

      Yes, the courts have ruled that you don't have to be allowed to do it in a specific manner, (Which was a constitutional argument against the No Fly list.), so they could likewise ban drunk driving...but the ban on public drunkenness appears to ban all movement.

      Yes, yes, in theory you have to something else besides be drunk to be charged with 'public drunkenness', but, at least in my state, that can be simply having 'vulgar, profane, loud, or unbecoming language', whatever the hell the police decides is 'loud' or 'unbecoming'.

      Which is a rather strange way to avoid the constitutional issue by...um...using another thing that's unconstitutional. Last I checked, you have a first amendment right to use unbecoming or even vulgar language. (And, no, that is not, in itself, a public nuisance. That has to be a pattern of some sort, that actually bothers at least a few actual people, not just a cop.)

      Or the cop can simply claim you were 'boisterous', which literally means that you have energy. (Presumably, if you didn't have energy, you'd be arrested for sleeping public.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    23. Re:Rule of Law by narcc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about this example - near my GF's house, 4 officers were shot in cold blood in a coffee house. They were drinking coffee. The assailant got away, and the assailant was known to have the "death by cop" wish. One of the dead officers was a friend of hers.

      That's the Lakewood shooting. I still don't feel any sympathy.

      "Death by cop" is only a "thing" because the police have this nasty habit of committing senseless violent acts and cold-blooded murder while hiding behind their infamous "blue wall of silence".

      Take the recent unprovoked cold-blooded murder of John T. Williams for example. (There are tons of other examples -- the vast majority of the time, the murderous cops get away with their crimes.)

      (Recently released footage here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcxqyp2wOzE)

      Mr. Williams, a partially deaf elderly man, was shot 5 times in the side by a police officer less than 30 seconds after leaving his cruiser.

      The blood-thirsty officer, Ian Birk, has been on paid administrative leave since the incident.

      If you're not a cop, and you kill someone, you spend time in jail awaiting trial. If you're a cop, you get paid vacation while the "incident" is "investigated" by your cop buddies.

      If the police are afraid to leave the house in uniform, it's their own fault. The constant abuses perpetrated against the public -- which habitually go unpunished -- is exactly what has caused the tension between law enforcement and the citizenry.

      When that tension turns violent and a cop gets hurt, I say that's fair. Perhaps they'll learn that with the power they've been granted comes responsibility and that the People will no longer tolerate the abuse of the rights and privileges we entrusted to them.

  3. There is no expectation of privacy by cpu6502 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    .....in a public place." - SCOTUS. It applies to the cops as well. They have no reason to believe they should be unrecordable when they are out on the road or on the sidewalk. Besides: They record us all the time, with cameras installed in their cars and taping during confessions.

    --
    My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    1. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by Zumbs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Furthermore, the police is given significant power over the citizens. Is it so strange that citizens want assurances that this power is exercised in accordance with the law? And that this includes watching over the shoulder of police officers on duty, exercising these powers? After all, power is known to corrupt if it is not held in check.

      --
      The truth may be out there, but lies are inside your head
    2. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by theaveng · · Score: 5, Informative

      I just heard on the radio today that cops arrested some Maryland Libertarians who were trying to collect signatures to appear on the state ballot. The LP members were asked to stop, and then when one of them whipped out a camera to document the unconstitutional limitation (the MD SC already ruled in favor of ACORN that petitioning is legal), the cops arrested them for assault.

      This is the second time. About two weeks ago a motorcyclist with a helmet cam was arrested when he posted a traffic stop on youtube. The cop had pulled a gun on the citizen w/o identifying himself AS a cop (he was plain clothes), and then the Police Bureau arrested the man after the Chief saw the video online. It seems Maryland is turning into a tyranny.

      --
      FOX NEWS.com should be BANNED from television and internet. Have the Congress take it over and give us Truespeak.
    3. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The sad thing is one day I might not be able to live in it. I am sliding more and more into a warrior's philosophy each day... I try to stay out of it, but one day I'm going to look around and realize I can't let things be the way they are.

      It doesn't matter. The whole impact of my existence is zero; if I die today it's fine. Never had a girlfriend, no kids, no need for that sort of thing; and I've completely rejected the part of society directly connected to me in the biological tree. and anyone tied to them usefully in the association graph.

    4. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 2

      Not all cops know this law.

      The camera man wasn't in the cops face. He wasn't in the face of the emergency personel. This wouldn't have made it to youtube or the cover of our school's paper if the cop didn't act like he did.

      The police chief came out later and said the cameraman was in the right. But that doesn't prevent the cop from acting like an asshole the entire time. The cameraman was physically shaking from being intimidated.

    5. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by Elbereth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Dude, what you're saying sounds very close to, "I am a ticking time bomb." It would behoove you to not state such things publicly, in a forum where posts can not be deleted. If I were an FBI agent, I'd start a file on you, just from that post. You sound like a potential terrorist, from the point of view of a government agent.

      And, for everyone else's sake, please don't stock up on ammo and fertilizer.

    6. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      The whole impact of my existence is zero; if I die today it's fine. Never had a girlfriend, no kids, no need for that sort of thing; and I've completely rejected the part of society directly connected to me in the biological tree. and anyone tied to them usefully in the association graph.

      Don't forget to take your meds, dear. The neighbours asked if you could stop practicing your martyrs cry in the backyard with that mock-explosive-jacket of yours. You're scaring their dog.

    7. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 2

      the word realistic is superfluous here.

      --
      This space available.
    8. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by jammer170 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You seem to have forgotten that in America we have something called Freedom of Speech. This includes saying I disagree with the government, and I'm going to work to change it in any way possible. America was born out of "terrorist" actions performed by "common criminals" and "dissidents", I apparently must also remind you.

      I will agree with one thing Elbereth said. Don't stock up on ammo and fertilizer. Learn to make it yourself. That way, if the government does go totalitarian, you aren't dependent on others.

      --
      Remember, you can't look dignified when your having fun! Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out of it alive
    9. Re:There is no expectation of privacy by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      You don't understand anything. When they come for your neighbors you'll huddle down and hope they don't come for you. When they come for MY neighbors I'll have a choice of doing something about it or vomiting up a lung in disgust at myself.

  4. Foul Bruce - Link to Actual Article by shaitand · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The link is to a stub article with no real content on Bruce's blog that just points to the real article:

    http://reason.com/archives/2010/12/07/the-war-on-cameras

    Bruce has useful articles sometimes but it isn't any more legitimate for Bruce to use his blog as gateway page to real articles than anyone else trying to scam hits for content that isn't theirs.

    1. Re:Foul Bruce - Link to Actual Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      His blog isn't just facts, it is clearly an editorial containing his opinion on what this means and how he feels about it. It is appropriate for him to link it in this way if his intention is to convey his opinion on the issue.

    2. Re:Foul Bruce - Link to Actual Article by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The link is to a stub article with no real content on Bruce's blog that just points to the real article:

      I disagree. His commentary about how privacy for the powerful decreases overall liberty while privacy for the common man increase liberty is a very succinct and insightful analysis. It may even be more important than the narrow topic of stupid legal tricks regarding the recording of on-duty cops.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  5. Re:and we should also... by blair1q · · Score: 2

    ...record things going (*whooosh!*) wherever it occurs...

  6. Radley Balko has written a lot more about this. by pigwiggle · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    46 & 2
  7. Chicago Artist Faces 15 Years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Chicago artist Chris Drew was charged with a felony and faces 15 years imprisonment for making an audio recording of his own arrest:

    http://www.c-drew.com/blog

    http://www.wellesparkbulldog.com/news/chris-drew-granted-a-continuance-in-free-speech-trial

    http://chilaborarts.wordpress.com/2010/01/01/why-is-it-a-felony-to-record-your-own-arrest-c-drew/

    1. Re:Chicago Artist Faces 15 Years by micheas · · Score: 2

      The Chicago artist Chris Drew was charged with a felony and faces 15 years imprisonment for making an audio recording of his own arrest:

      http://www.c-drew.com/blog

      http://www.wellesparkbulldog.com/news/chris-drew-granted-a-continuance-in-free-speech-trial

      http://chilaborarts.wordpress.com/2010/01/01/why-is-it-a-felony-to-record-your-own-arrest-c-drew/

      At least this was someone that was consciously challenging a probably unjust, unconstitutional law, as opposed to someone that was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.

      That said, I really hope the law is invalidated by the courts.

  8. Re:and we should also... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and we should also record store clerks, the checkout counter at the grocery, fast food transactions, buying lottery tickets, paying tax bills, trying on clothes in the store changing room...

    oh wait....

    Had you RTFA, you would know Schneier's reasoning for making it legal to record the police, and you would consequently realize that those reasons would not apply to your counter-examples, thus rendering your rebuttal useless.

  9. Not just wiretapping laws by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Prosecutors are able to get away with these bad faith prosecutions because of a doctrine called "prosecutorial immunity". We need a way to hold these prosecutors responsible for their actions, that will require the abolition of prosecutorial immunity.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    1. Re:Not just wiretapping laws by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is correct because courts have ruled in several states that recording a police officer in the process of a traffic stop or otherwise conducting his official duty on a public street is not a violation of the "all parties" wire tap laws, yet prosecutors keep bringing these charges.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    2. Re:Not just wiretapping laws by taustin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Generally speaking, prosecutorial immunity is a) applied to civil, not criminal, offenses, and b) does not cover acts that prosecutor knows or should know are illegal.

      What's needed is somebody, like Allison, to dig in their heels and push it and push it, until it gets to the Supreme Court, where he will win.

      And if you want prosecutors put in prison for abusing their power, vote for people who will do so. Make it your only issue, and get your neighbors involved, too. If you won't, because "it won't do any good," you're part of the problem.

    3. Re:Not just wiretapping laws by oracleguy01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is correct because courts have ruled in several states that recording a police officer in the process of a traffic stop or otherwise conducting his official duty on a public street is not a violation of the "all parties" wire tap laws, yet prosecutors keep bringing these charges.

      I think it is kind of like the other crap in the legal system these days. As the little guy you might be 100% in the right but since you have comparatively very limited resources they bank on people being too afraid to having to spend tons of money proving their innocence. So they get to make it more or less illegal without the actual political blow back of making it illegal.

    4. Re:Not just wiretapping laws by taustin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you can't be troubled to stand up for your rights, you have none, and deserve none. People like you are the reason politicians (and corrupt cops and prosecutors) know they can get away with, literally, murder. Enjoy your utopia.

  10. You're violating Contempt Laws by Kagato · · Score: 2

    Contempt of cop that is.

  11. It's video such as... by pongo000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...this of harassment by the Detroit PD which is the reason why our gov't officials want to make videotaping of LEOs illegal.

    Yet further evidence of our (as in US) slow slip into the grips of a police state.

    1. Re:It's video such as... by GiveBenADollar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I kinda understand where the officer was coming from. There were some people loitering outside a gun buyback and buying guns. This in itself is not illegal, but if the owners of the property object then the loiterers can be asked to leave, or they can call the police and ask the police to make them leave. All normal. When the officer gets their CCLs that's pretty normal too, people loitering where they don't belong buying guns seems like probable cause. The problem is that the officer treated them like criminals instead of like innocent bystanders conducting a harmless transaction where they are not wanted. There was no cause for the officer to get upset with the questions being asked. The problem here comes from the police officers assumption that he is the law rather than the enforcer of laws, and sadly that is pretty common in these incidents. Once he had determined that the people there were within their legal rights he should have asked them not to loiter around there and wished them a happy holidays.

  12. Police side of things. by GiveBenADollar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I work with an ex police officer and he's pretty set against 'civilians' recording police, in his eyes its another way to get innocent police officers in trouble since a lot of the videos that have implicated officers in the past have lacked any context. This makes sense because a clip showing police brutality could be part of a longer incident where the suspect resisted arrest and tried to hurt the officer. I understand that in the heat of the moment a person who feels their life is in jeopardy may use force which seems excessive out of context. That being said, the same officer buddy is in favor of red light cameras, the nanny state, and airport scanners that see through your clothes. You can't have it both ways in a free and just society. You can't give the police the ability to watch everyone while denying the public the ability to watch the police. I think a better solution, that nobody in law enforcement would like, would be to put cameras on police officers and also allow the public to photograph them. That way in a court of law you have evidence that can provide context to any side videos in play. If the police officer is innocent he has nothing to fear from the surveillance, that's the line they have been feeding the public in general so it's fitting for it to fly back in their faces.

    1. Re:Police side of things. by marcop · · Score: 2

      I think a better solution, that nobody in law enforcement would like, would be to put cameras on police officers and also allow the public to photograph them. That way in a court of law you have evidence that can provide context to any side videos in play.

      That assumes the video doesn't mysteriously go missing or the camera doesn't mysteriously malfunction during crucial moments. Both have happened before.

      The police can argue context and the benefit of the doubt can be given. However, some video is quite clear that police brutality does happen.

    2. Re:Police side of things. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I work with an ex police officer and he's pretty set against 'civilians' recording police, in his eyes its another way to get innocent police officers in trouble since a lot of the videos that have implicated officers in the past have lacked any context. This makes sense because a clip showing police brutality could be part of a longer incident where the suspect resisted arrest and tried to hurt the officer.

      Then a court of law will sort it out.

      Your cop friend, frankly, sounds like a thin-blue-line, don't-mess-with-the-brotherhood asshole. He should realize that accountability is a *good* thing. Well, assuming he cared about cops actually being held accountable.

      I think a better solution, that nobody in law enforcement would like, would be to put cameras on police officers and also allow the public to photograph them. That way in a court of law you have evidence that can provide context to any side videos in play

      Absolutely! As you say, there is a *very* obvious solution to this problem: When a cop is involved in a law enforcement action, *the police record themselves*. Problem solved.

      But, of course, that would involve transparency, and cops actually, possibly being held accountable for their actions. And who really wants that?

    3. Re:Police side of things. by PCM2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So it's the old "sure I kept clubbing him, but you gotta believe me, he resisted arrest twelve minutes before the camera started rolling" defense, eh?

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    4. Re:Police side of things. by chemicaldave · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Police brutality, by definition, is never warranted, regardless of context. Police exist solely to apprehend people, and the courts are used to administer punishment. And if a video is taken out of context, the courts will decide what to do. The idea that a recording might be misused as evidence in court is no reason to ban it entirely. This is likely why many police departments are starting to use surveillance devices on officers' uniforms and tasers, it protects everyone's rights involved. It only makes sense that a civilian be able to record any interaction as well.

    5. Re:Police side of things. by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That assumes the video doesn't mysteriously go missing or the camera doesn't mysteriously malfunction during crucial moments. Both have happened before.

      Right, but the aspect where police can record themselves is complemented by the public being able to record them as well. We need -both-.

      That way if the "public" produces video that casts the police in a bad light, the police can contribute their video that puts it into context. There is nothing the public will be able to record that that will harm an innocent officer because he'll have his own "alibi tape". And the argument against the public recording them goes out the window.

      Now your comment that police may withhold video that is 'damaging' to their position is bang on, but then we'll have the public recording to work from. And if the police camera that exonerates them "failed at that crucial moment"... the courts can sort it out, with an annotation that perhaps they should invest in cameras that "work better" for their own protection.

    6. Re:Police side of things. by Entropius · · Score: 2

      No officer should be convicted of anything based on a video taken out of context. If a video taken out of context shows a cop appearing to do something illegal when he's really not, then he can explain it to the judge and jury during his trial, and if his explanation makes sense, he will be acquitted. If the person who made that recording did so maliciously, then the officer can sue for libel.

      Why should the police have extra protections against false prosecutions beyond what every citizen has?

    7. Re:Police side of things. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, if you apply a little logic that defense seems a lot more probable than 'I was minding my own business doing nothing wrong and the officer started clubbing me.'

      It does, huh? Apparently you didn't watch any of the news coverage vis a vis the G20 demonstrations... innocent people beaten and/or arrested by cops rendered unidentifiable by their "safety" equipment, thus rendering them immune to prosecution.

      In short: I trust a cop about as far as I can throw them. Anecdotal comments like those in the OP only make me *more* suspicious.

    8. Re:Police side of things. by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Seriously? So a guy is on the ground and the cop is beating him, and beating him, and beating him, and nowhere is the suspect seen trying to resist except to cover his head with his arms so he won't be knocked unconscious, you're going to accept the defense that it's OK because we just happened to miss the part where the guy was resisting arrest? How long does a police officer have to beat a suspect before they're considered to be subdued? The argument doesn't even have to me "I was minding my own business doing nothing wrong" -- if I was on a jury watching the videotape, I would convict a police officer for beating a guy for twelve minutes even if I knew the guy had committed a crime.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    9. Re:Police side of things. by calmofthestorm · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Arguably, if the cops are recording it too, they can show the context you didn't see in the shock vid on YouTube. I fail to see why the cops are against this; it's nice to be able to prove you're telling the truth when you have the public calling for your blood.

      --
      93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
    10. Re:Police side of things. by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This makes sense because a clip showing police brutality could be part of a longer incident where the suspect resisted arrest and tried to hurt the officer. I understand that in the heat of the moment a person who feels their life is in jeopardy may use force which seems excessive out of context.

      NO. If a guy is shooting at police they have a right and a responsibility to do everything to stop him including kill him.

      Once he is disarmed, cuffed and on the ground, immobilized, rendered harmless, then any physical attack - kicking, punching, using a night club on him - IS POLICE BRUTALITY.

      Police do NOT get to exact revenge, they do not get to punish. They do not get to hit a suspect to "blow off steam" or release their adrenaline or frustrations.

      ANY video of an unarmed, restrained, immobile person UNDER CUSTODY being struck is a video of police brutality and IS IN CONTEXT. It doesn't matter what preceded it, even if the fucker just shot a baby in the head.

      It certainly is understandable that a person who just had his life in danger might react that way and lash out at a subdued attacker, but it's not legal, and it should not be tolerated because otherwise cops have become judge and jury and warden.

      It's called professionalism. It needs to be trained in, it needs come down from supervision, and cops who have undergone stressful situations need debriefing and even counseling. If a cop CAN'T handle that, and has to hit restrained person, then the job is not for them, period. They just don't have what it takes, or rather what we should demand it take.

      If you're a phone rep and you get a complete obnoxious idiot on the line who drives you nuts for an hour, you do NOT get to swear and scream at them to let out your frustrations. You take a few minutes after the call to cool off.

      Cops needs to be expected to be professionals held to a high standard, NOT just "the boys" who are basically OK hanging out playing with guns and protecting people but who get a little out of hand during stressful situations.

      --
      This space available.
  13. The police should embrace public video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A recent Canadian survey shows that people, while they overwhelmingly still support the police, do not support them as much as they used to.

    We have had several police abuses of power that came to light only because of video. The worst was the killing of a Polish man at Vancouver airport. Also we had the beating of innocent people during demonstrations at the recent G20 meeting in Toronto.

    An officer has been charged in one of the G20 beatings because video made it possible to identify him.

    The disturbing thing is that the police stood in solidarity with their brother officers in their own Mafia style code of silence. Only one officer could be found who was willing to identify those seen in the videos.

    It won't take too many more incidents before the population turns on the police. They have had the benefit of the doubt until now. At some point that will end. The police, if they knew what is good for them, should embrace video as a tool for cleaning out the goons who should never be allowed to wear a badge.

  14. Illegal Wiretapping by the Gov? by purpledinoz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So the government can illegally wiretap its citizens with no punishment. But a citizen can be arbitrarily thrown in jail for recording a cop? This sounds like a story that would come out of the former East Germany. Not the United States of America.

  15. Its not the video... by MDillenbeck · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Its not the video recording that is the issue, it is the audio. There are states where you cannot record audio without both parties being aware of the recording. Believe it or not, this is done for your protection. Thus, if you are like the biker who got pulled over while using a helmet cam, my advice would be wearing a T-shirt that states by being in your presence you are agreeing to be audio recorded.

    1. Re:Its not the video... by TheL0ser · · Score: 5, Funny

      my advice would be wearing a T-shirt that states by being in your presence you are agreeing to be audio recorded.

      Congratulations! You, sir, have just invented the EULA and won yourself the obligatory xkcd.

  16. Recording the Police by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I believe the key to recording the Police is never to let Andy Summers solo for more than one measure. All the musicians went a little wild with the improvisations on the recent reunion tours and I think the songs suffered for the lack of restraint.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:Recording the Police by grcumb · · Score: 3, Funny

      I believe the key to recording the Police is never to let Andy Summers solo for more than one measure. All the musicians went a little wild with the improvisations on the recent reunion tours and I think the songs suffered for the lack of restraint.

      Also: Don't stand
      Don't stand so
      Don't stand so close to them

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
  17. The one-way mirror state by just+fiddling+around · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is a related opinion piece on Salon.com right now:
    The government's one-way mirror

    --
    You're not old until regret takes the place of your dreams.
  18. Well then, CHANGE the law. by MarkvW · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In many States, citizens possess the power of initiative, where laws can be presented directly to the people.

    A law that decriminalizes recording law enforcement officers acting within the scope of their duties or acting during their working hours (and immunizes the same conduct) is something, I suspect, that the general voting population would support.

    If you care, get out there, conspire with others and ACT. I guarantee that you will be surprised at your results.

    Look at what the no-tax freaks accomplished. It IS possible--don't let the naysayers with their weak arguments keep you down. Look at the crime victims' bill of rights that many states now have--those generally come from citizen activity!

    There is almost zero downside to political activism of this sort in the US. You won't get killed (like you might in some other country) and you are likely to face negligible negative consequences. The worst that can likely happen is that you will fail. But think of all that you will learn in the process: Media manipulation . . . public speaking . . . organization . . . logistics . . .. That experience will make you more effective the next time . . .

    And then you will be a politician, my son.

    Now, get off my lawn!

    1. Re:Well then, CHANGE the law. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Initiatives aren't even necessary. There's a related story to TFA recently wherein police attempted to seize the camera of a man for recording them as they arrested another man for distributing jury nullification information. The camera owner won his suit, so it's legal to record on courthouse grounds. The other man is not being charged, though the government's threatening to bring a case against him for "jury tampering," which he sincerely hopes they will bring, since he feels it's a sure path to victory for his cause.

        His cause is to inform people of the right of jury nullification, wherein jurors can simply refuse to convict anyone guilty of breaking a law they feel is wrong. In this way, the people can "nullify" any law that it dislikes, effectively removing it no matter what the government's disposition on the matter.

        Back during the eighteenth century, a group of Quakers were arrested in England for religious pamphleteering, which was criminal. They admitted right in court to distributing pamphlets describing their religious views since they had strong moral views about lying and didn't think what they did was wrong. Well, the jury agreed and found them innocent.
        The British government promptly arrested the jury for failing to return a guilty verdict when the facts were not in dispute, effectively judging the law rather than the fact. This caused a great scandal and controversy about the rights of jurors.

        The founding fathers were widely in agreement that this was a case of tyranny, and that jurors did indeed have a right to judge the law as well as the fact. John Jay, first justice of the Supreme Court came down in favor of it: "The jury has a right to judge both the law as well as the fact in controversy."

      John Adams said of the case that "it's not only .... (the juror's) right, but his duty, in that case, to find the verdict according to his own best understanding, judgement, and conscience, though in direct opposition to the direction of the court."

      In 1920, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said "The jury has the power to bring a verdict in the teeth of both law and fact."

        Yet, despite these and many other famous persons coming out strongly in favor of it, judges in modern America insist on hiding the whole concept from juries, and instructing them that they are only to find fact, and to render a verdict based solely on whether the law was broken or not. Judges have rendered mistrials when they suspect jurors know of nullification, and people who try to inform others of this tradition in American law are harassed and supressed.

        Get the word out!

  19. Re:and we should also... by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And let's not kid ourselves; the reason you have cameras on store clerks is because store clerks steal. There's this stereotype that convenience stores are always getting robbed. Trust me, though, when I worked at a 7-Eleven as a kid, the camera wasn't pointed straight down at the register because that's where they thought I would be standing when I was robbed at gunpoint. The cameras are there for theft prevention, and nine times out of then the thief is an employee.

    So if it's OK to use cameras to prevent store clerks from committing crimes (or document them), why is it not OK to use cameras to prevent police officers from committing crimes (or document them)? Not only do police officers sometimes commit pretty heinous crimes, including robbery and battery, but I would argue that just about any crime committed by a police officer is more serious than one committed by a store clerk, both because of the abuse of authority and the breakdown of societal values that inevitably occurs as a result.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  20. Camera in eyeglasses by h00manist · · Score: 2

    Perhaps eyeglass-mounted cameras and a video-in connector on the cellphones.

    --
    Build your own energy sources from scratch. http://otherpower.com/
    1. Re:Camera in eyeglasses by atheistmonk · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wait... So all those hipsters with the phony glasses I meet are secretly recording me? Jesus Christ.

    2. Re:Camera in eyeglasses by slick7 · · Score: 2

      "Perhaps eyeglass-mounted cameras and a video-in connector on the cellphones."

      That doesn't help the contact wearers, or lasik people....or even those rare people with normal uncorrected vision, unless they happen to be out in daylight wearing shades.

      Just as it once was, asking a person if they were a cop will turn into the police asking if you are recording this interaction.
      The only difference being, if an undercover police officer says no, so what, try to prove entrapment in a court of law. On the other hand, if you say no to an officer, you are obstructing justice.
      Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely, with the police, add a firearm. Hint: Many officers carry a concealed throw away firearm. In my humble opinion, concealed throw aways should carry an automatic death penalty. This does not mean the officer should not be permitted to carry a concealed registered firearm, one that is traceable to that officer in addition to the holstered one.

      --
      The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
    3. Re:Camera in eyeglasses by ocdscouter · · Score: 2

      I'm sure they'll quit as soon as they find out everyone else is doing it too.

    4. Re:Camera in eyeglasses by ogl_codemonkey · · Score: 4, Informative

      Undercover police are allowed to say they aren't cops. That's kind of the whole point.

      Entrapment laws are to protect people from going to jail for something they wouldn't have done if they weren't asked to; not for something they wouldn't have done if they didn't think they could get away with it.

  21. How I handle it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because of this, I will consider the police and prosecutors to be liars until proven otherwise.

    If the cop had to shoot a guy because "he was resisting arrest", the cop better have an unaltered video of it happening because I will consider him to be a liar without it. You see all these type of cases in news where all the police cameras failed at the same time and it happens when the police used questionable force on a suspect.

    It's one sided. Only they are allowed to video and as a result, they can control which video is available.

    Until this horseshit of prosecuting citizens for recording of police ends, then as far as I'm concerned, the police are lying until proven otherwise.

    Someone gets their ass kicked by the cops, well there better be video showing that it was necessary.

    If the cops don't like it, then they can get another job. My local police are constantly turning applicants away so there's no problem replacing any cry baby cop who says "it's rough out there!".

    1. Re:How I handle it. by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 2

      Absolutely. A daily log of which cameras are malfunctioning should be kept. At the end of each day, that log should be handed over to a 3rd party for safe keeping.
      It should then be assumed that every camera not in that log was functioning, and that if it SHOULD have caught evidence then it did, and that the evidence has been destroyed. If footage of an incident is 'missing' it should be assumed that the party in posession of it destroyed it because it was unfavourable to them (and so make any chance of a conviction where they should be video of the incident, but isn't, as good as impossible). A handful of genuinely guilty people may go free by claiming that footage from genuinely malfunctioning cameras would have exonerated them (when it wouldn't), but that should stop it pretty-much dead.

      It may be a little more tricky to balance it for allowing a person who claims to have been abused by the police to try and use absence of the video as evidence in a civil claim against the police. That would probably require a complete overhaul of the system - if a conviction for an offence related to the reason for the arrest cannot be obtained (because footage is 'missing', or otherwise), the prosecution should be assumed to be malicious, and the initial arrest false. A doctor's report documenting the injuries, and the presumption that they were inflicted in the course of a false arrest ought then to be able to establish a claim for damages. But the substantial additional burden that would place on the public purse would probably be politically difficult.

      --
      FGD 135
    2. Re:How I handle it. by Culture20 · · Score: 2

      You see all these type of cases in news where all the police cameras failed at the same time and it happens when the police used questionable force on a suspect.

      Every button on an officer's uniform should be a mini-cam. I'd be happy with them driving google cars too. They all can't fail then...

    3. Re:How I handle it. by digitallife · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unfortunately your opinion doesn't matter to them. You cant hassle them and throw them in jail. You can't give them a ticket for whatever you feel like. You can't beat them senseless and claim they were resisting arrest. they don't give a shit if you think they are liars and should be fired. And they most certainly wont be fired because you think they should be.

      The imbalance of power and lack of checks is sickening.

  22. Why the citizens do it by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

    Has anyone stopped to ask why otherwise decent people would be posting videos that put the police in such a bad light? I have said this before, and I will say it again: there is no conspiracy amongst criminals to discredit the police, we do not live in a comic book world. These are ordinary people posting videos that make the police look like violent thugs; that means that ordinary people have a problem with the police.

    Personally, I do not think it is all that surprising that so many people have a problem with the police, given the size of our prison population and the fact that the police cannot turn the other cheek when it comes to enforcing our numerous laws. The police are the face of law enforcement, and by extension of the law itself, and so people who discredit the police are acting out of a general distaste for the current state of the law. I think a good first step toward repairing the relationship between the citizens and the police would be to repeal many of the laws that have landed so many decent people in prison cells (I would say innocent, but in a technical sense, they are not innocent).

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  23. Re:and we should also... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    >Had you RTFA, ...

    You must be new here...

  24. Re:and we should also... by greatgreygreengreasy · · Score: 5, Funny

    But, but... According to Jim Pasco, executive director of the national Fraternal Order of Police, police misconduct is "so rare it might as well not exist."

    --
    LRN 2 SWM
  25. Context still matters by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2

    There's a couple reasons:

    1) What force is appropriate depends on the situation. If you are standing peacefully, following all instructions, almost no force is appropriate. They can grab hold of you and handcuff you if you are being arrested, and guide you in to their car, but that is about it. Anything else is probably excessive since you are offering no resistance. However if you come at them swinging, well then a good deal more force is authorized. They can fight back to subdue you. Doesn't mean any amount of force is ok, doesn't mean they can beat the crap out of you, but getting physical is fine in that situation. This increases again if you use or threaten lethal force. You pull a gun and threaten them, they are justified in shooting you.

    So context matters in that what the civilian did before can make a difference. You show just the police being rough with someone as they take them down and restrain them, without showing the person throw punches first, it changes the perception of the event.

    2) You do have to account for human emotions. If you expect the police to be perfect inhuman robots that never react emotionally, then you are an idiot. So if someone punches a cop in the face and the cop hauls off and punches them, that has to be considered. I'm not saying "Let the cop off scott free," but also don't punish them lkke you would a cop that just hits someone on no provocation.

    Now none of this is to say "ban recording of the police," but it is something that has to be considered in terms of admissibility of evidence and use and so on. People can edit their video for their own ends. Perhaps along with laws allowing the recording of police, there needs to be a requirement that for the video to be used in any kind of disciplinary or criminal action it has to clearly show the events leading up to the problem. So if a video shows a person and a cop talking for a bit, and the cop suddenly gets violent, that is usable. However if a video just shows a scuffle, it is not.

    1. Re:Context still matters by bware · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You do have to account for human emotions. If you expect the police to be perfect inhuman robots that never react emotionally, then you are an idiot. So if someone punches a cop in the face and the cop hauls off and punches them, that has to be considered.

      That only works one way. If I react emotionally to a cop, I'm going to jail for a long time, and that's the best I can hope for. Nothing will be considered. Worst case, the thin blue line arranges for me to be beat either by cop or by inmates at the holding cell.

      So why is it that you only cut slack to the cop, who is trained, armed, and paid to be professional, and not to the citizen, who is none of those things, and will not get the benefit of the doubt?

  26. Re:9 times out of 10? by broknstrngz · · Score: 2

    9 out of 10? Wow, is that a real statistic?

    No, 78.3% of all statistics are made up on the spot.

  27. The police are the face of the law itself by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In a sense, the police represent the public face of the law itself. If people are losing their confidence in the police, it is because they are beginning to lose their confidence in the law being just. Here in the United States, I would hardly think that is surprising, given our enormous prison population and tendency to criminalize harmless behavior that large portions of the population engage in. I cannot speak for Canada, but in the USA, we imprison so many people that only Nazi Germany and the USSR have us beat -- we actually imprison more people now than China, all convicted under our legal system.

    The police do not want to be videotaped because after so many years of enforcing the sort of laws that created this situation, they know that there are people out there who want to discredit the police. The police know that their job is unpopular and they do not want the citizens to have the ability to make the police look bad. They know that they are not just going after bad people. They know that they are losing the support of the population, and that in many cases they are sent on patrol in areas where they have already lost that support.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  28. Simplified by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Getting more to the point, a police officer holds the special right to employ coercion (meaning physical force) against you (not in defense, but in offense). No private individual or organization holds that right, and thus a police officer is automatically more deserving of extreme scrutiny (not to mention how they're supposed to be working "for us" in the first place, supposedly not the other way around).

    1. Re:Simplified by davecb · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In the British tradition, a police constable is a person who is paid to do the same duty he owes to the peace as a private citizen. We all have the duty to chase down robbers, and we just had a court case in Toronto (Canada) that underscored a shopkeeper's right to chase down, arrest and hold a thief for the police.

      Regrettably, in some jurisdictions, including mine, a police constable is privileged and armed, without being under the same stringent laws as a member of the military.

      Returning to the point of the article, some few wold like to prevent themselves from being photographed. They haven't succeeded, and one constable was just charged for beating up a spectator at the G20 summit, courtesy of citizens who did their duty and recorded the assault and provided the films to the newspapers, youtube and the courts.

      --dave

      --
      davecb@spamcop.net
    2. Re:Simplified by Marful · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You must live in California, because that looks to be exactly the case as it stands here with one addition. Police gain protections and immunities both in state law and in federal law.

      However what you described is only what is on paper and leaves out the many unwritten laws. Such as that the police, being above the law, get to decide when the law is enforced and may always claim a misinterpretation of the law to justify what would otherwise be criminal acts.

      My favorite example of this is the HB police officer who was stalking a coke using stripper and eventually stalked her leaving her work, pulled her over, blew his load on her face and sweater and then left. Despite the DA prosecuting him proving that he had ran her plates through CLETS 30 minutes prior to her leaving her work and his pulling her over, and despite catching him in several perjuring statements in court, the judge and jury some how ruled that because she was a stripper, she was a professional at using her body to manipulate men, and that she had some how manipulated the officer into the circumstances to get out of the traffic incident.

      Of course, then there is the case in San Diego where they mobilized the swat team to apprehend a teenager over a stolen PS3 and when they went to arrest him at his parents house opened up with their automatic weapons through a frosted glass door because the kid "had a weapon" when he was holding the PS3 controller...

      Or then there is the guy who is serving time in jail for shooting a cop when the police were serving a no-knock warrant on a criminal who had left the apartment complex 6 months prior, and whose apartment was on the other side of the complex. The police broke into his apartment, never announced who they were and the guy reacted what any rational person would do, he immediately grabbed a handgun and went to his infant babies room and shot at the first armed attacker that came after him.

      Or how about the mayor who uses a separate last name from his wife who received a random shipment of drugs. And despite the FBI, DEA and the state police knowing that it was just a blind ship and that the criminals often snatch it from the porch before the home owners get the package, the local police, decide to do a dynamic entry on the mayor. Breaking in and killing their two dogs (who were fleeing the cops) and arresting the mayor and his wife for drug trafficking...

      Well, I can go on and on, but the facts remain that the police can basically do whatever the hell they want regardless of what some mere paper says their authority is restricted to.

  29. Re:and we should also... by Wansu · · Score: 4, Informative

      So if it's OK to use cameras to prevent store clerks from committing crimes (or document them), why is it not OK to use cameras to prevent police officers from committing crimes (or document them)?

    Because the USA has become a police state.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  30. Re:New Paparazzi by Rakishi · · Score: 2

    Making it legal to do so will result in creating a new form of paparazzi that chase down any and all police action. Anyone with an imagination should be able to think of a reason that will not be a good thing.
    Can you imagine unnecessary people involving themselves in;

    That's such a massive problem in state's where it's legal, it's bringing the whole structure of society to a grinding halt.

    Not only will these people trying to get that that video footage be putting themselves in harm way, they will be splitting the attention of the officers to ensure their safety.

    How will officer's ever cope, such an amazing new technology. So different from anything that's ever existed. Never before have people stopped to look at what the police do, no one was ever blessed with any method of visually observing officers before this amazing invention. No police officer has ever in the history of existence had to deal with a crowd of gawking on lookers. Just how can they possibly cope.

    I am all for law enforcement accountability, my suggestion is that they be recorded by devices on their person, for review by a 3rd party created for that purpose for review of actions.

    "Sorry, Mr. Judge, apparently the office accidentally set the recording device on fire so there is no evidence of what the defendant speaks of."

  31. Re:9 times out of 10? by PraiseBob · · Score: 3, Informative

    I would estimate the actual number at much higher than 9 out of 10. In my business (restaurant chain) I'm in charge of a approx 100 cameras at a couple dozen locations.

    Company wide-
    We fire at least 100-200 employees per year for theft.
    We generally get burglarized a few times a year.
    We've been robbed at gunpoint twice in the past decade.

    Of the burglaries and robberies that I know of, at least half were inside jobs, with former or current employees to blame. So well over 99% of theft is internal, in my company. Camera positioning definitely reflects that.

  32. Maryland precedent by gatkinso · · Score: 2

    In Maryland, the police recently got their asses handed to them.

    http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/news/crime/blog/2010/09/motorcyclist_wins_taping_case.html

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  33. Re:and we should also... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Police are no different but the government and themselves would have you believe they are somehow ethically superior.

    It's not "the government" or even police who are trying to make you believe they are ethically superior. It's been an ongoing theme from the right-wing "law and order" crowd for decades. You hear it constantly from conservative media. You're constantly hearing about how they love law enforcement, how those who are accused of crimes are always guilty (of something) and how the police are "doing a very difficult job for very little pay".

    You get the same stuff about the military. We always hear how the military are "the best and brightest", which really hasn't been my experience. The new convention is that whenever a caller says they're in the military, you'll hear "thank you for your service" and fawning praise for every knucklehead who walked into a recruitment office and signed up. It's because "they are protecting our freedoms" which is a load of crap. You don't "protect your freedom" by invading some shithole halfway around the world, you protect your freedom by...videotaping the po-lice for chrissake. They believe deference must be paid to the judgment of people who've put on a uniform, because I guess it makes them feel a little less like the soft, privileged lard-asses that they are. We heard this constantly from Republicans during the debate over the repeal of DADT: "We'll vote for it when the military leaders say we should vote for it" and how we have to protect our fighting men from...the licentious gay soldiers who will have nothing better to do in the middle of a firefight except stare at the butt of the guy in front of them. Wait, what? We have civilian oversight of the military, but the civilians charged with that oversight suddenly have nothing to say. Except when military leaders (chairman of the joint chiefs, secdef, etc) say "OK, we ought to repeal DADT, then the argument became "we should ask the enlisted men". When the enlisted men said "It's OK with us" the argument became "We should only ask the people who hate queers".

    The whole idea of deferring to law enforcement or the military is anti-American. The Founders decided that we'd have a civilian-led military for very good reason. Because the judgment of someone who wants to pick up a gun and leave home to go out and fight bad guys just can't be trusted. The same thing with law enforcement. There are places in the world where the police are the absolute power in a community, but in this country, they work for the civilian government, not the other way around. And ultimately, the civilian government is us.

    So it's our goddamn civic duty to keep on eye on law enforcement and the military. There's a good reason that most people don't want to become cops or soldiers, and the ones who do bear watching.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  34. Re:and we should also... by budgenator · · Score: 3, Funny

    Nah too complicated, just have the Donuts Shop Owner turn over the surveillance tapes instead of Protection money.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  35. Re:and we should also... by jc42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You hear it constantly from conservative media. You're constantly hearing about how they love law enforcement, how those who are accused of crimes are always guilty (of something) and how the police are "doing a very difficult job for very little pay". ... We always hear how the military are "the best and brightest", ... deference must be paid to the judgment of people who've put on a uniform, ...

    What is especially curious is that this sort of praise for the police and military seems to come from the same people who keep telling us that the government can't ever do anything right. They don't seem to be aware that the police and military are pretty much all government employees, working from some of the biggest government bureaucracies that exist.

    So which is it? Are government employeess always incompetent and untrustworthy? Or are the police and military above suspicion?

    (My personal conjecture is that they're all just humans, with pretty much the same foibles and failings -- and successes -- as the rest of us. But what do I know? I do suspect that we might learn something about the truth if we monitor them and make their activities public knowedge. Maybe we could hire the wikileaks folks for that data-collection task? ;-)

    --
    Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  36. Re:and we should also... by dfay · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well then clearly they have nothing to hide.

  37. Re:9 times out of 10? by LurkerXXX · · Score: 2

    Robbery - the felonious taking of the property of another from his or her person or in his or her immediate presence, against his or her will, by violence or intimidation.

    Theft and robbery are two different things.

  38. Re:I agree in general, but I do understand by Kpau · · Score: 2

    Maybe you should visit some modern large corporations..... where cameras record all employee activities. Here we're talking about being constantly recorded and monitored for poor productivity or petty theft. I know a pharmacist (who technically can also kill people) who works in such a place ... the Big Brother Eye is, of course, to protect the corporation's liability and interests. POLICE have firearms and can kill or seriously injure people... but here we have posters arguing they shouldn't have to worry about being watched, observed, or held accountable by the public that hired them. The instant I hear a cop say "civilians" instead of "citizen" ... its a clue they've lost that little connect-the-dot that they work for the public

  39. Re:and we should also... by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is really apples and oranges. Surveillance on store employees is always OK, because the store is private property, so if the store owner wants to record stuff in his own property, that's his right. How anyone could make an argument against private surveillance inside a private business, I have no idea.

    Police recording, however, generally concerns recording their activities in public spaces: on sidewalks, on streets, etc. There's two issues here: 1) in public spaces, how can there be any expectation of privacy? Some stupid States might have laws against photographing people in public, but such a law is stupid. If you're in public, you have no right to expect privacy. If you want privacy, go someplace private, not out on a street with hundreds of people surrounding you. Police officers in public shouldn't have any more expectation of privacy than anyone else standing on the street. 2) the police are government agents, and the government is supposed to be accountable to the People. If these uniformed government agents (who are not secret agents, unlike certain sectors of government that require secrecy) are in public, their actions should be allowed to be recorded by third parties, in order to maintain that accountability. If we lose accountability of the Police to the People, then we might as well give the Police brown shirts to wear.

  40. Re:I agree in general, but I do understand by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

    The reason is we all slip up, or goof off, or whatever while working from time to time. None of us like the idea that something like that is forever committed to tape, subject to review and so on. I mean how would you feel if at work your employer wanted to watch you all the time? Not like cameras in the halls, but a camera on you, and on your computer, that all the time they wanted to record what you did, and have the ability to review it at any time for things they find fault with? I bet you'd be against that, even though you are probably a perfectly upstanding employee with nothing to hide overall. It is just uncomfortable the idea that you'll be recorded all the time and someone could look over everything you do.

    It certainly is, but police officers have significant powers that a normal citizen does not have. They are someone who, in the course of their work, can employ, and even initiate, deadly force. And I think that this power alone is reason enough to allow citizens to record any interaction.

  41. Re:New Paparazzi by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

    Making it legal to do so will result in creating a new form of paparazzi that chase down any and all police action. Anyone with an imagination should be able to think of a reason that will not be a good thing.
    Can you imagine unnecessary people involving themselves in;
    A high-speed police chase?
    A hostage scenario?
    A drug bust that turns violent?

    There are already laws against interference with police duties, which cover all the situations that you describe. (Though it should be noted that in states were recording is legal, those laws are sometimes abused by police to prevent such legal recording by claiming that a mere presence of the camera is "interference").

    On another point, when these officers are being recorded, so are the suspected criminals, and possibly even victims. What about their privacy rights?

    Of those states which have the requirement that all parties must be aware of the recording for the conversation to be recorded, most have the "expectation of privacy" provision. The gist of the argument for change is that a police officer on duty, especially when performing an arrest or otherwise interacting with a member of the public openly in his law enforcement capacity, has no reasonable expectation of privacy. In the case you describe, other parties would presumably have it (or not, depending on the circumstances of the case - when recording on a crowded street, there is certainly none!).

    What about justice not being served when a criminal gets his case thrown out for video evidence going viral on the internet before his trial, turning the jury pool against him?

    A case cannot be "thrown out" on such grounds. The judge would simply direct the jury to ignore any evidence aside from that presented in the court room.

  42. Re:and we should also... by wierd_w · · Score: 2

    More likely it is a real world instance of de-facto doublethink.

    Where the original idea behind doublethink had the individual engaging in it be fully aware of the dischordant nature of the two systems being imposed, in this case it would appear that the internal dischord is resolved through pure ignorance of the existence of that dischord-- EG, the thought that police officers are part of the government never crosses their beady little talk-radio addled minds.

    Bringing it up causes the dischord to appear. Since they view themselves as always being right (hence the superiority rhetoric), they view this sudden internal dischord as a sign that you are full of shit and a liar, and they promptly disregard the information you have provided them with, and willfully maintain their ignorance.

    I agree with the GP-- Sunshine policies against law enforcement is a good remedy against the effects of corrupt people that are otherwise attracted to such vocations.

  43. Re:and we should also... by wierd_w · · Score: 2

    I agree.

    One possible argument to lob here is that the issue of public surveylance has already been on the table for well over a decade, thanks to redlight cameras.

    Redlight cameras are motion activated video feeds, and often catch much more than just redlight violations. The feeds they capture are able to be directly used as evidence. The areas being monitored are public intersections, which, if we believe the rhetoric behind "Public property", is jointly owned by all citizens of the area in question (City or state), and administered by the local government as a necessity. (Much like "national parks" are "Public lands") If the city administration and local police powers can install, and utilize this kind of surveylance, why can't the local citizenry?

  44. Re:New Paparazzi by Rakishi · · Score: 2

    But maybe I'm wrong, I mean its not like there are any examples of what some idiot with a camera won't do to get a shot they can sell to TMZ for 15 minutes of fame.
    There's just no possible way that someone who is more interested in catching something "juicy", could possibly get in harms way.

    Shit happens, the world is a dangerous place. You're the same sort of idiot who runs the TSA and thinks we should all fly naked with explosives collars on our necks. Sacrifice everything for a marginally higher and often false sense of security. That is why the tone of my previous post was the way it was.

    Onlookers is always a possible concern, but I think you failed to catch my comparison to paparazzi, who are anything but casual/passive onlookers.

    It's an idiotic example which is why I ignored it. Celebrities are interesting, everything they do is interesting to people, them taking a dump is news worthy in tabloids. 99.99% of what police do is either boring, routine, by the book or otherwise worthless to watch. It's like saying it should be illegal to videotape cars since, after all, people would love to post a video online of an interested car crash and if they're allowed to tape they'll block the sidewalks gawking.

    People who are already involved or watching will tape it, like they already do in many places, instead of just gawking as they all do now. Little change. If they're too much of a problem then the police can get them for that as the other poster mentioned. If it becomes a real problem you can just pass another set of laws to fix things.

    Your position on this topic seems obvious from your sarcastic remarks, but I merely stated my opinions and do not expect anyone to believe what I believe. I am merely trying to consider ALL of the ramifications of specifically making it legal for anyone to do so.

    Everything has detrimental side effects. You're blowing the ones you notice out of proportions likely to justify a pre-existing view on the issue.

    Regarding my suggestion, is it a perfect solution? No not by farm I'm certain, but I believe that something along those lines is a far better solution than inviting the public to become involved, because they will be getting involved for the wrong reasons.

    And many others will get involved for the right reasons. That's the whole point. The police either abuse their power or are perceived to abuse their power. Police won't prosecute or catch police. It's a good ol' boys club. It's already a problem. Rational people don't trust the police even a smidgen. As in, saying anything to the police is considered a massive risk unless you're legally forced to. It's an absurd and horribly broken way to run a society. Your word against theirs if they decide to be assholes and the judge is their friend. Any solution that they control is inherently useless since you can't trust it. Citing rather small hypothetical potential problems to stop solutions to existing problems is stupid.

  45. Re:I don't need privacy if I can record. by ancientt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was looking for a place to put this, just to make sure somebody records it as "prior art". Every vehicle and potentially non-vehicle items, should be capable of transmitting fail-safe video uploads to a public server. That server should receive video which is made public at any instance where, after a pre-set time, if a password is not entered, the site will automatically make it public.

    As an example, many if not most cars would have at least four cameras which constantly record audio and video which are constantly uploaded to a internet server. That video remains private so long as a password is entered at an appropriate time, but becomes public if it is not. Non-public video is available with the password for download for a specific period of time then deleted by the host. If you forget your password, or deliberately pick an invisible password, your video becomes public without any interaction on your part. Every dangerous driving episode you witness is potentially evidence against the perpetrator, but so is every interaction you have with anybody, police included.

    Here's how I imagine a hypothetical routine traffic stop proceeding in one of two ways, Scenario One:
    Officer: License and registration please.
    Driver: Here you are officer, and though it may be legal not to, as a courtesy, I would like to draw your attention to the "Ever Vigilant" stickers on my car. These stickers indicate the cameras which record all activity in the vicinity of my car. My interactions with law enforcement have always been good, and I expect this record to show the same.
    Officer: This is not a public record and I'm giving you a lawful order to desist recording now.
    Driver: I do not have the ability to cease recording and the legal rights to do so are defended by the "Ever Vigilant" corporation, but I will gladly comply with any lawful requests that I can. As you can see, I'm reading from the script provided on the sticker on my dashboard.
    Officer: Thank you for making the situation clear. I am now ordering you to leave your vehicle and accompany me to my patrol car.
    Driver: As advised by "Ever Vigilant" I will do so but must ask, is there a reason you cannot continue providing the public service you provide within the scope of the recording devices provided by "Ever Vigilant" equipment?
    Officer: Leave your vehicle now.
    ...(time passes)
    Jury: We find the officer guilty of the following offenses...
    Scenario two:
    Officer: License and registration please.
    Driver: Here you are officer, and though it may be legal not to, as a courtesy, I would like to draw your attention to the "Ever Vigilant" stickers on my car. These stickers indicate the cameras which record all activity in the vicinity of my car. My interactions with law enforcement have always been good, and I expect this record to show the same.
    Officer: Thank you for saying so, but officers of Dallas County are trained to notice such things, and of course consent even if not legally required to recordings. Thank you for your license and registration, do you know why I pulled you over today?
    Driver: You're welcome, but I don't know why you pulled me over.
    Officer: Our radar equipment recorded you exceeding the speed limit, is there an emergency which would require you to exceed the speed limit today?
    Driver: I wasn't aware that I was breaking any laws, but I hope that the "Ever Vigilant" software will show that I was following a reasonable application of the law. (You may note that I'm reading a sticker on my dashboad as recommended by "Ever Vigliant.")
    Officer: I see that, please wait in your car.
    ...(time passes)
    (non-contest plea, video public, and don't laugh, I personally appreciate obvious courtesy and training even if guilty of an offense)
    Commanding officer: ... and as shown by Ever Vigilant surveillance recordings presented by a stopped speeder, courtesy beco

    --
    B) Eliminate all the stupid users. This is frowned upon by society.
  46. Re:and we should also... by one+cup+of+coffee · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Case in point is all the dark horse instigators the left places at right-wing events with the sole intention of causing an "incident" that might reflect badly on the organizers."

    I think you need a citation for that. I did a quick Googleing of your claim and came back with nothing. Even after trying to reword it in different ways in an attempt to get better results. So, I tried reversing it, and glaringly, the opposite understanding of what you're claiming seems to be the actual case.

    http://www.komonews.com/news/local/81376642.html

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/17/AR2008071701287.html

    I thought about listing several of the ones I found, but it actually became overwhelming, These two are just more recent cases, sorry but I don't have time to go all the way into it, but from the looks of it, this has been going on for a really long time. You might want to revise your understanding after going over this. Here's some additional reading if you have time.

    http://scholar.google.co.jp/scholar?q=police+agitators+infiltration+of+anti+war+protests&hl=ja&as_sdt=0&as_vis=1&oi=scholart

  47. Re:and we should also... by tftp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe because organised crime could find a lot of uses for a database of the faces of police officers?

    If organized crime cares, it can just buy copies of HR documents on each police officer. Or if the mafia has nothing better to do, they may send some kids to take photos of officers and then follow them home. Over time they will get everyone, and it's 100% legal.

    Besides, police officers interact primarily with lawbreakers. They already show them their faces and their badges. A LEO in Las Vegas has no reason to be worried that some geek in China will see his face. That LEO better be worried that a local gangbanger saw him and followed him home. And you don't need a camera for that; binoculars would be far more effective.

    Police objects to recording of their actions for only one reason: their actions can be used to hang them. Everyone makes mistakes. Raise your hand everyone who hasn't exceeded the posted speed even for one second on your way to work today. Won't be many hands raised, unless you all rode bicycles. Now imagine that the car automatically fines you each time when the number '65' changes to '66'. It wouldn't be worth going to work. In case of police, their errors (regardless of the reason) *also* can have them punished, fired or accused of a crime. Naturally they don't want this to happen. Neither do I or you, but we can't forbid others from seeing our misdeeds. Police can, currently, but that's wrong. If some officers say "we do dangerous work, with gun in hand, so if we shoot a family dog or a kid now and then we shouldn't be accountable." If they can't do their job safely and within the law they should quit; and if the whole police force quits then Wild West, here we come, for better or for worse.

  48. Re:9 times out of 10? by hitmark · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How many of them get a lower wage because of the "tip"?

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  49. Re:and we should also... by superdave80 · · Score: 2
    Sadly, that isn't the stupidest thing Jim Pasco said in the interview:

    I ask Pasco if he believes someone like Michael Allison should go to prison, potentially for the rest of his life. “I don’t know anything about that case,” Pasco replies, “but generally it sounds like a sensible law and a sensible punishment.

    He first says that he doesn't know anything about that particular case, then in the next breath says that it sounds good that she could go to jail for the rest of her life!!!! And all he knows is that she recorded a public official during the course of performing their duties!

  50. Re:and we should also... by smashr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What is especially curious is that this sort of praise for the police and military seems to come from the same people who keep telling us that the government can't ever do anything right. They don't seem to be aware that the police and military are pretty much all government employees, working from some of the biggest government bureaucracies that exist.

    I respect those who voluneteer for our armed forces, follow our duly elected civilian leaders, and protect our country. Even if that means they are deployed in cases which they may not agree with, or even are unjust/unwarranted. I respect them because it takes courage to volunteer for dangerous, low pay jobs in support of your country. I respect them even if I disagree with the politicians who sent them to war.

    I consider myself conservative/libertarian, and despite my respect for the milatary, and in some capacities law enforcement, I absolutely believe that neither group is above the law.

    1. There is absolutely no circumstance that comes to mind where it should be illegal for a civilian to record his/her own interaction with the police. If the police question/talk/harass/interrogate me, and I have the ability to record it, it should absolutely be protected 100%. If you are a member of law enforcement, you simply have no right to privacy with respect to the people you are interacting with. Furthermore, if you are properly enforcing the law, you have nothing to fear!

    2. It should additionally be absolutely protected for third parties to record police interactions, as long as it occurs in a public forum -- streets, parks, building lobbies, open resturants, etc. A law enforcement official enforcing the law in a public forum has no expectation of privacy whatsoever, period.

    Unfortunately, I see no long term path that can take us effectively towards this goal. Our best hope is a number of hard-fought battles in a federal court.

  51. Re:9 times out of 10? by PCM2 · · Score: 3, Informative

    9 out of 10? Wow, is that a real statistic?

    That's a statistic that I made up. At the particular 7-Eleven store I mention, the real figure was actually 10 out of 10. And if I want to rely strictly on my own experience, I'm not sure I'm aware of any cases in all my history of working retail where money was taken from a store where the culprit wasn't an employee. That includes cases where an employee and his friends staged a fake robbery for the cameras.

    I'm talking cash money now. Merchandise? Sure. People steal merchandise all the time. But cameras don't usually catch people stealing merchandise. Cameras catch employees taking money from the till.

    Maybe there's something to this thing about treating employees decently?

    Quit jerking yourself off. My boss at this particular 7-Eleven was a great guy. I'm really sad that he's dead of cancer now. He was suffering from cancer the entire time I worked there, and I pulled many a double shift when some asshole failed to show up for work, because I sure as hell wasn't calling this poor guy up in the middle of the night to close the shop because my relief hadn't shown up. If he had any fault, I reckon it was hiring the wrong people -- because the clowns he put his faith in stole from him left and right. I tried to warn him, others tried to warn him, but if you're of a certain generation, I guess, you tend to trust people you shouldn't.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  52. Re:9 times out of 10? by PCM2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's a load of horseshit. I was working at a 7-Eleven, yes. It was shitty hours for shitty pay. On the other hand, they respected me, a 17-year-old kid at the time; they gave me some responsibility and some work experience; and they paid me promptly every two weeks. Then again, it was shitty hours for shitty pay. But you know what? I'm not a fucking thief.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  53. Re:and we should also... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

    Being a police officer or a soldier pushes people towards certain undesirable behaviour. When you are faced with people who are out to get you, bad guys you have to hunt down and maybe kill every day it has deep psychological ramifications. We see it a lot with soldiers who are basically descent people but who get fucked up by war and do some really terrible things. Being in the police is less extreme but it is still a job that surrounds you with criminals, often violent ones.

    We need to get past this "few bad eggs" argument and accept that all people in the military and in the police forces need monitoring and support. It has nothing to do with the qualities of the individual, it is just a fact of life that the job messes people up.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  54. Re:I don't need privacy if I can record. by clone52431 · · Score: 2

    “Cease recording” is never a “lawful” request.

    --
    Distributed Denial of APK: It takes 15 seconds to reply to him anonymously, but wastes tons of his time if we all do it.
  55. Re:YOU WHINEY FUCKING CRYBABY!!!!!!!! by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

    My existence does matter - to me, at least. I'd like to make sure my daughter doesn't have to be deprived of her daddy, because some creepy little fuck, like you, decided to commit suicide and take a few other innocent people out along the way.

    Mine doesn't because I will die one day. It's like when you work on an engineering project all night... then your CAD program crashes and you didn't save. One day I will be able to speak 6000 languages, beat anyone in Go, build nuclear reactors that neither shutdown nor breed weapons-grade nuclear materials yet still recycle spent fuel into fresh fuel... and then nothing. All those abilities vanish as the electrical processes of my brain shut down.

    One day you'll cower in your home because you don't want your daughter to lose her daddy. You'll stay there when the US government rolls over college students with tanks and suppresses the news, closing your ears to the whispers of dissent. You'll watch your coworkers and your neighbors disappear, taken by the police for heinous crimes for whispering such things... and believe it must be something more heinous. And you'll huddle down out of sight.

    20 years later, they'll come for your daughter when she's barely in her 40s, and strip her away from your grandkids.

    And the whole time, you'll shout about the dissenters, you'll distance yourself from anyone who questions the authority of your protective government, you'll learn to be afraid of THEM ... and be glad when they vanish in the night.

    That's your future. That or a bloody revolution. Whichever one comes, I'll be out there fighting in it. It'll start when they come for someone and I have to stop them... or when someone else decides it's time to stop them and the mob refuses to be beaten down. It's all a matter of timing; now is not the time.

    I doubt the mob will ever come. I don't doubt I'll live to see them come for those outspoken with undesirable political opinions though.

  56. Re:and we should also... by crumbz · · Score: 2

    If your car fines you every time you go over 65, then don't drive or 60 or so. Problem solved.