Essex Police Arrest Man Over Blackberry Water Fight Plan
An anonymous reader writes "Under the banner headline 'Police reassure residents they are working to keep county safe,' Essex police proudly proclaimed that they arrested a 20-year-old man from Colchester who 'allegedly sent messages from a Blackberry encouraging people to join in a water fight.' Having also made a number of arrests of people sitting at home on Facebook, Acting Assistant Chief Constable Mason wrote: 'Police will continue to monitor social networking sites for unlawful activity.'" That's some good police work there, Lou.
The police are just looking out for the man's interests. If he took his Blackberry to a water fight it could get wet and be ruined and it would just end in tears (which he would hide by getting wet again). They saved his Blackberry to tweet/text/post another day.
They're really determined to become Airstrip One, aren't they?
asking undefined amount of people to meet in public is illegal in increasing number of countries.
because that's a riot. or unlawful assembly. or whatever.
he should've sold something and advertised for people to come buy it - at least that's still legal almost everywhere.
next up, banning using post office to invite people. commercial spam's going to be ok though.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
This is an age-old debate but in my opinion there needs to be significant compensation for arrests that don't lead to convictions. Even more so if the arrest doesn't even lead to a charge.
The way things are at the moment, people who are wrongly arrested are expected to see their eventual release as a "relief" and be thankful for it. That's not how it should be. Otherwise the police had might as well arrest and hold everyone, take their time investigating all of them, and then release everyone who didn't do anything wrong.
In the venn diagram of arrests and convictions the target intersection is 100%. Currently it is nowhere near 100% and that is not entirely due to a flawed court system, it is partially due to too many innocent people being arrested.
Does he not have the freedom of assembly? Does he not have the freedom to call for an assembly? What part of a water fight is not legal? If he was planning a non-crime, then what is the pre-crime? Can you be arrested for a pre-crime in England?
welcome to 1984!
The problem with the original riots was soft policing. Moving gangs on, instead of arresting them.
I'm sure in the US they would have got a good tazering, or just skip to the live ammo.
So this storiy is basically a tacit admission either that:---
Blackberry and Facebook are doing realtime or near-realtime surveillance of users and sending suspicious information to the British police; or
The British police are capable of, and are, listening in on Blackberry or Facebook* without the co-operation of these corporationsi i.e., they're surveilling network traffic or similar. Facebook is entirely conducted through HTTPS nowadays, so if this be the case, that the bobbies can listen in is an even more significant revelation.
* This conclusion wouldn't hold of course if the police are merely trolling through what people post in public on Facebook, which is entirely a possibility considering how ignorant many people are about discretion and privacy.
Liberty in your lifetime
I thought they were the British CIA-equivalent.
I don't know if this is over reaching or not, but there was at least one death and a number of serious injuries back in 2008 in these mass water fight events.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article1499810.ece
If every time one of these events happened, there were serious injuries, I can see the logic behind trying to prevent the gatherings in the first place.
I'm glad they arrested him for attempting to organize this. They have to keep the momentum on BBM crackdowns after all of the arrests made from the rioting and looting earlier. You know what was started with a water fight? World War I. Archduke Ferdinand took a water balloon off the temple and there's your catalyst.
Ha haw ha hah ha ha har ha ha ha phhhh ha ha ha ha ha hah ha ha ha ha ha hah lol ha ha heh ha ha ha ha heh ha ha ha ha ha hah ha ha ha hahe haw ha ha ha ha ha ha ha haw ha ha har ha ha ha har ha hah ha ha ha! Cute little trolly-piggies, they so funny!!! ;')
nuff said
Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Under article 11. Since there are two different systems of Law in The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the European Convention on Human Rights is the final adjudication on this. So he can go to a water fight - however the possibility that a water fight could affect the "peace" it could be restricted on the grounds of possible public safety. In Scotland, which is the country with a different legal system, the possibility that a "water fight" could get out of hand would be classed as "intent to commit a breach of the peace". However a regular water fight in a sensible location would be hardly fall into that category.
However this is all academic because it appears to come from a collection of stories in today's Colchester gazette where it reports that a man was arrested for trying to organise a thousand strong water fight in the town centre or 'inciting public disorder.'http://mobile.gazette-news.co.uk/news/9194795.Man_charged_after_allegedly_trying_to_organise_a_mass_water_fight/
I'm reasonably certain that if their is any truth in the story, the local constabulary would have to take it seriously and avoid charges of complacency.The story appears to have been drawn from the Monday morning court calendar - the normal source of news on a Monday morning. The same report mentions another man, posting on facebook, one assumes he is the main feature of this post and he was released without charge.
Posts, MyBio or Sig, may contain satire, sarcasm, bolded nouns be sardonic or even witty & be Church of SD
It's only used to protect the public, of course.
That was sarcasm, right?
vos nescitis quicquam, nec cogitatis quia expedit nobis ut unus moriatur homo pro populo et non tota gens pereat.
That's what you get for giving up your gun right's you flippin fairies.
Sure, because that could never have happened to gun owners ...
</sarcasm>
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
Just using facebook should be a crime.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Aren't there any good books about any other countries becoming totalitarian dictatorships that people can lazily reference in lieu of saying anything worthwhile?
Conspiracy theories aside, the UK still has a free press and a functioning democracy. I don't know what kind of utopia you're dreaming of but I'm afraid to say that we in the West may not be far off having it as good as it gets, civil liberties-wise - at least until our attitude towards crime evolves beyond police and prisons, something I'm not convinced will ever happen.
State censors arrested a dissident British performance artist for attempting to incite pro-democracy protests using a "Blackberry," a social networking device popular in his native country. The arrest comes just days after a wave of intense pro-democracy demonstrations among British peasants in the capital city of London and the subsequent crackdown by state security. David Cameron, the British Prime Minister, has been quoted as saying the protests "brought great shame to the ancestors of all involved" and would be "severely punished in accordance with the Glorious United Kingdom's policies as prescribed by The Great March Towards Austerity"
nuff said
If I were a cop, and had a choice to arrest one of two potential criminals -- one that had a knife and one that had a water balloon -- well I think I'd take the safer choice, too.
I am not a crackpot.
I'm confused. They say they're monitoring social networking sites for unlawful activity, but what exactly is unlawful about a water fight? They're defeating their own logic with their statements.
They are both afraid of water fights in their streets apparently. I was just looking at an article just the other day on how the youth in Iran were gathering for water fights, and the article showed this beautiful Iranian girl with a squirt gun, (Super Soaker type) with a big smile on her face. It was talking about how the regime frowned on these water fights, but the youth of Iran would not be daunted and were out in the streets having fun. It's just a peaceful assembly of young people having fun.
Even in Iran, the crazy old men in charge there have had enough common sense to just back off and let the kids play. It's a water fight, if you can't let the kids play in the water, what kind of monster are you?
Behold the irony, a man gets arrested for communicating a water fight with friends in Britain. Fear, and Loathing in England. My attorney and I need plane tickets, a fast red convertible, some cash and a hotel room in London immediately. I need to cover this story.
Take the Red Pill.
Because, ye gods, lately there aren't enough real criminals in the UK to arrest and prosecute through the justice system rather than people planning water fights? Get a fricking sense of priorities, you incompetent morons.
First they came for the mass water fights... what next? Illegal pillow fights? Jello fights? Pie fights? Just how silly and harmless would it have to get before it wasn't cause for overly sensitive police state drones to arrest the people responsible? How about a mass stand-in where people stand an arms length apart on public property and do absolutely nothing for a while? Is that allowable?
Probably not. That's why the statement of 4 boxes in liberty exist.
Om, nomnomnom...
http://www.ocregister.com/opinion/london-311857-want-book.html
So what are the police going to do if it rains heavily, arrest god?
Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
the 5th of November!
Is that you?
so basically, harmless flash mobs are illegal now
If I recall the National Guard was called out to
quash panty raids at the Univ of Arizona in the
mid '60s. This was long before blackberry phones
or social media web sites.
Then there was the anti war sit-ins and a gaggle
of impromptu sing-ins.
As much as the times they are a changing
the times are the same.