The Courage of Bystanders Who Press "Record"
HughPickens.com writes Robinson Meyer writes in The Atlantic that in the past year, after the killings of Michael Brown and Tamir Rice, many police departments and police reformists have agreed on the necessity of police-worn body cameras. But the most powerful cameras aren't those on officer's bodies but those wielded by bystanders. We don't yet know who shot videos of officer Michael T. Slager shooting Walter Scott eight times as he runs away but "unknown cameramen and women lived out high democratic ideals: They watched a cop kill someone, shoot recklessly at someone running away, and they kept the camera trained on the cop," writes Robinson. "They were there, on an ordinary, hazy Saturday morning, and they chose to be courageous. They bore witness, at unknown risk to themselves."
"We have been talking about police brutality for years. And now, because of videos, we are seeing just how systemic and widespread it is," tweeted Deray McKesson, an activist in Ferguson, after the videos emerged Tuesday night. "The videos over the past seven months have empowered us to ask deeper questions, to push more forcefully in confronting the system." The process of ascertaining the truth of the world has to start somewhere. A video is one more assertion made about what is real concludes Robinson. "Today, through some unknown hero's stubborn internal choice to witness instead of flee, to press record and to watch something terrible unfold, we have one more such assertion of reality."
"We have been talking about police brutality for years. And now, because of videos, we are seeing just how systemic and widespread it is," tweeted Deray McKesson, an activist in Ferguson, after the videos emerged Tuesday night. "The videos over the past seven months have empowered us to ask deeper questions, to push more forcefully in confronting the system." The process of ascertaining the truth of the world has to start somewhere. A video is one more assertion made about what is real concludes Robinson. "Today, through some unknown hero's stubborn internal choice to witness instead of flee, to press record and to watch something terrible unfold, we have one more such assertion of reality."
I know what the groupthink around here is, but "...now, because of videos, we are seeing just how systemic and widespread it is" is an expression of a preconceived notion, not a valid inference from data.
Read the book "Earth" to see that David Brin predicted that ubiquitous cameras would have a major effect on society.
You know what.....all this would stop if "those people" would actually listen and respect authority. Stop means stop and get on the damn ground. If I was a cop - I'm not sure I'd shoot him in the back as he ran away - as he's no threat. But seriously, this could have all been avoided if the thug would have obeyed the officer's commands to begin with!
Stop being thugs! How about being a productive member of society like the rest of us!
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? - Who will guard (watch) the guardians? Now we know - us!
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
There's a man in a world of pain.
Can you hear it in the air
and the words he sings?
He's just a man; nothing more, nothing less
but nonetheless lives his life with every drop he bleeds.
I follow Photography Is Not A Crime on G+, and boy is it ever chilling. If you feel like you need more of that cold feeling in your belly, just follow those guys.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Do that in a country where the government/police regularly and openly flout the law with impunity? Courage.
Do that in the US where the majority of police act in a lawful manner and the unlawful minority at least run the -risk- of being held to account by that majority? Not courageous.
Most bystanders stop and record not out of any sense of duty, morals, or anything else that furthers democracy. Most are doing it out of simple voyeuristic self-interest.
Really? The one who shot the video was Feidin Santana. It was all over the news yesterday evening.
e.g.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new...
Wow!
Yep, we have no idea who shot the video. When slashdot cannot keep up with the TV news...
http://www.theguardian.com/us-...
nuff said.
Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
.. for exposing illegal behavior by agents of the state. Edward Snowden is "a traitor" for doing the same. Just goes to show..
It's pretty obvious to me that this cop is in serious trouble here as the video makes that very clear. I am a staunch liberal and oppose this racist police brutality but at the same time I know that we need police to enforce the laws that we cherish like gun control and making sure taxes are paid and unfortunately that requires police with guns and military gear now due to the influence of the NRA. It's great though that this was caught on video because we have to weed out these corrupt racist cops.
Not to mention that it's illegal now to videotape officers -- if they had seen this person recording they would have arrested him for obstruction of justice and destroyed/lost the phone and/or footage.
Holding a camera and recording video while in no direct danger does not make someone a hero. I don't think it means what you think it means.
Before the shooting starts, the video was running. That is, someone pressed "record" before it happened. Unless there is some pre-recording feature, then at least aiming the camera at the scene.
Now without knowing that something was going to happen (how should the witness have known?) the recording happened by pure chance. Question is, why was the camera running before - was there any courage involved? How difficult was it to keep the camera running when the shooting started - how much reaction time to stop recording and flee?
Do we need, for this reason, cameras always on everywhere?
That video confirms my unvoiced preconceptions about your country. They may not remain unvoiced now.
It is good to see people recording events like this. Whether that is from bravery, curiosity or prurience does not matter. The watchers are now being watched.
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
Don't turn it off, either, until the event is long over.
I've had police in my face before, and there is no democratizing tool quite has powerful as a lawyer on retainer and/or a recording device.
Tools like Meerkat and other live streaming services are going to change the world, and not necessarily in the way their authors intended.
..don't panic
* Only those 'reformists' who desire increased state surveillance.
It's just as easy to lie with a video as it is verbally. Remember that video of the police officer pepper spraying a protester in their car? It had purposely been cut so that it didn't show the preceding altercation that justified the officer's actions.
A couple years ago I sat in on a trial of an officer who was tried and convicted despite all evidence to the contrary, simply because of people blaming police for everything. That anger and frustration is completely misplaced - if people want change then they need to research politicians and make better voting choices.
It might behoove you to watch the video in question before you start to say something as arrogantly vapid as this comparing a situation you have no link to with this video.
Police officer Michael T. Slager, the name Slager is Dutch for Butcher...
As an outsider, i.e. non-USA, I'd say the perfect example of a trigger happy 'culture'.
Around here a copper would be done for disproportional violence just for pulling his gun or Tazer on an unarmed man.
"The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
"unknown cameramen and women lived out high democratic ideals"
What's recording someone being an ass-hat have to do with being democratic? Recording people is being used by people of every though process - right or wrong it's blackmail, in this case I consider it "good blackmail" - we're blackmailing those who "enforce the law" into complying with the law, the same way they record us to prove when we weren't. Blackmail is more or less a universal trait that bridges every political ideology, except maybe the most enlightened ones that will never gain traction because they lack the necessary evil to gain mass adoption.
The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
"They were there, on an ordinary, hazy Saturday morning, and they chose to be courageous. They bore witness, at unknown risk to themselves."
Yeah no, basically they were hoping for youtube hits and when it blew up and the cop shot the guy they were probably to stunned to run away.
Keep filming people but lets not sell it as heroism.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Now, we have access to independent video in a relatively small and unsystematic sample of those cases; and it turns out to differ from the official story fairly frequently.
But are these videos widespread because they exist, or because of the disparity between stories?
How can you ask if these videos are widespread when the OP is pretty much telling a few lines above that the videos represent (and I quote) "a relatively small and unsystematic sample of those cases"?
There is no reason to believe (nor data to back the belief) that people are filming only when a cop shots/hurts someone just upload them when the cop is in the wrong (and not uploading them the cop is in the right.)
So, without evidence that filming folks are displaying such a bias, then we have to consider the films as a really good random sample (of a small size, but it still random) out of a larger population of events (police encounters ending in confrontation, officially described "justified" on average.)
So now that we take a random sample (the videos), and we see that the expected properties ("justified on average") doesn't hold, then we have to re-examine the basic premise (that "justified" might not hold as common as it is officially trumpeted.)
Obviously, more evidence, more films (larger, more representative samples) are needed. But that doesn't deny the troublesome picture these films portray.
And to be honest, we all know this shit has been going on forever. We just like to pretend this shit doesn't happen, that them folk got it coming, and that the entire American experience is (and was) a mix of The Andy Griffith Show, Leave It To Beaver and Lassie.
It takes a couple of death people caught on film to get that shit of a notion a second look, doesn't it. That speaks volumes about a society's infinite capacity of self-deception.
Are there videos that show justified shootings that don't make national news because there's no story other than "cop defends life of self and/or others"?
Are you trying to prove a negative?
Police brutality is neither systemic nor widespread. Like air travel, despite being much safer than driving, when there is an accident it gets a lot of media coverage, so the perception of it is not accurate. What is systemic and widespread is corrupt journalism more interested in giving the people what will get them to click more than actual facts.
The ACLU NJ chapter has a handy app called Police Tape. Everyone should have it, or something similar, installed just in case.
The problem is the self-styled "State of Israel" which occupies the Holy Land under pretense of zionism. They have excessive influence over the entire USA, due to the machinations of AIPAC and their rapture-awaiting minions. The jiddish have a very profitable and dangerous monopoly over in-situ and overseas training of american police forces. Their instructors instill the predominantly pale-face law enforcement officers with a brutally militaristic and far right death-squad like attitude, full of judeo-protestant racial superiority ideology, teaching them to shoot the negro and hispanic dead on sight, as if they were palestinians. The police who have been brainwashed by hashbara / kravmaga become monsters, who see suspects only as involuntary organ donors.
The israeli ex-military "security" companies, like In-Kal, have a vast experience doing this racial profiled brainwashing, since their major 1970-1994 military ally was the apartheid pariah country of South Africa, where the negrokind were regularly beaten and shot by the white boers, as if cattle.
(If not for the international democratic brigade troops, mostly sent by Castro, there wouldn't be a single black african person alive south of the Equator today, because in the late 1970s Sud-Africa and Israel started a war to invade and exterminate Angola and then the rest of the continent. Their Africa plans failed only because a cuban army, composed of ethnic negro and hispanic soldiers arrived with large strenght and held back the judeo-protestant white invasion. The USSR only provided materiel and a deterrent against the south african and israeli A-bomb threat, but cubans shed their blood. This is why many blacks worldwide consider Castro the equivalent or better than HIH Ras Tafari.)
Today, the racial war against negro and hispanic people is being fought on US soil. Young generation are raised with a messgae to look down on everybody not hip with wealth and de-humanize them for upcoming mass shotting. I hope Castro will recognize the U.S. 2nd amendment as protected and mandated by the 14th amendment and thus, send large shipments of firearms to all american coloureds as a basic human right, so that there would be no unarmed black or hispan for the police to shoot as cattle. If every negro became a rifle-wielding Black Panther, the AIPAC masterplan would fail overnight. Today, many US negro are so poor they can't even afford the ridiculously overpriced firearms and are relegated to act as mere clones of the stone-throwing palestinians, who are facing live-firing battle tanks.
when the facts came came out in fergueson & they supported the cop you didn't hear a chorus of "mea culpa"s... hell, you didn't even hear crickets! amazingly (/frighteningly), you're hearing the two cases (charleston/fergueson) being treated as if they're the same thing which could not be further from the truth.
don't get me wrong - I 110% agree we have an excessive police force problem in this country, that minorities (particularly aa]s]) bear a hugely disproportionate share of it, that it is beyond unacceptable/decisive action is YEARS (if not decades) overdue but ignoring the truth of a particular case b/c the popular myth serves the "greater good" is always counterproductive in the long run...
all that said, I have to say I'm pretty amazed by what I've seen from the family so far. you look at the browns (where it's clear he did reach in car/was coming toward cop), the martins (where we'll never definitively know what actually happened) versus these people?!? of the three the one family who'd be pretty well justified in calling for the town to be burned to the ground is handling themselves with more grace/restraint than I suspect I would (& I say that as a 1% wasp). while they certainly owe "us" (town, society at large) none of it I have to thank them for the example they're setting so far - they're holding a rather large gas can over a fire in their "enemies" back yard & (so far) choosing not to dump it...
Just in case you need them, read PINAC http://bit.ly/10rules2recordco...
"You never want a serious crisis to go to waste." - Rahm Emanuel
UK newspapers seem to consistently have high quality coverage of issues on this side of the pond.
In this latest shooting incident where a policeman is shown in a video shooting a fleeing suspect in the back .. no one can say that is an honest thing to do. Even if that man had committed a crime you don't shoot a suspect in the back when they run away. you call for a helecoptor and the entire force hunts him down. ... The exception would be if the criminal was armed.. if he had taken the officers gun and the officer had to use a backup then it would be reasonable to stop him with deadly force. However this is not the case so far as explained. .... ... now to the other point .. there are a lot of bad people out there and not all of them are cops. If you read statistics from the FBI you will see that African Americans commit 7 murders for each murder committed by a white however African Americans are only 12.5% of the population so if you extrapolate the statistics so both whites and blacks were the same percentage of America then black people would be committing in the area of 28 murders for every murder committed by a white person. Those are insane statistics but they hold up. and the acts of violence are much greater. To say there is no problem in the African American community is ignoring the problem. When acts of violence from African Americans on other groups... white, latino, asian are so extremely high then it can be said that society as a whole needs to address why African Americans are committing crimes at such a disproportionate rate and level... Its not just people smoking weed its rape and assault and theft and murder... and it is one group.. Look if people die theres a body.. theres a weapon and there is a criminal.. to deny who is committing these acts is as bad as denying anything else that results in death and destruction... I agree bad cops are criminals and nothing less. They are often criminals who join the force with a reason and hide their motive until they get out on the street .. they extort rape and murder and we all saw the movie serpico.. on the other hand cops aren't killing 1000 people a day in this country and that is the average body count. Thirty people can die in Chicago on an average weekend many more when things get bad but its not just Chicago its every small town in america.. most of it has to do with drugs.. the heroin trade.. drugs that come in from our enemies in Afghanistan.. It needs to end and we cant ignore the thousands who die every year just because a few criminals are given badges... if the cops all went away tomorrow.. there would still be a heroin addict in your neighborhood because they are in every neighborhood now.. whether its powder or Oxycontin its all the same... so does this cop deserve the death penalty .. sure.. but so do all the other people that commit murder...
Say he fired 8 rounds, did all of them hit the victim? If not, where did the stray rounds go? Was he firing his weapon in a residential area? I would be really pissed if a bullet went through my kitchen and killed my cat because some caveman racist mistook his gun for his penis.
. . . training which can curve some of their impulsive tendencies... however at the same time insure if they need to use force it is more affective.
should actually be written,
. . . training which can curb some of their impulsive tendencies... however at the same time insure if they need to use force it is more effective.
This uses curb with the definition of, "to check or restrain," and effective with the definition of, "producing a desired result" (as opposed to affective, which may be defined as, "influenced by, or resulting from, the emotions").
These types of errors (using similar-sounding words instead of the correct words) are called "malapropisms." The speaker knows which of the two words is correct, but somehow when speaking (or writing) the brain pulls the wrong word out of memory. It's an interesting neuropsychological phenomenon.
America as a police state is becoming more difficult to live in. Remember that the next time you basement-dwelling ignorant racists and xenophobe geeks feel like putting down India just because you are pissed off at your own H1B policies.
I thought nerds were the blacksheep of their respective habitats? Shouldn't we band together to fight ignorance instead of promoting it? It seems that there are way too many backwoods rednecks on slashdot for any kind of rational dialogue to occur. Blame all of your problems on our president because of his skin color. Make claims supporting the actions of mass murderers and dictators. It only serves to prove my argument that the tech world is loaded with cavemen who don't actually understand the world, but would rather build technology to force the world to fit their twisted model of reality.
The person may be keeping quiet, but the ID of that phone or camera is embedded in the video file somewhere, and if no one else can access that information, certainly the police can figure it out. If it is a phone, it is designed to identify the owner. For terrorism prevention, we've made it impossible to hide from the cops. Sucks if its the cops who are out to get you.
The courage of bystanders? How about the fact that a taxpaying citizen had to stop and do the job of the infrastructure that is failing him but he will always have to pay taxes for. Who wants the idea that if they go for a walk, they need to keep in mind it might be there job to record a cop gunning someone down ruthlessly. The infrastructure fails and a citizen happened to be there, so yay lets praise this wonderful travesty of a situation.
Filming a terrible event taking place is one thing; acting to stop it is wholly different, and far more courageous.
Pictures, still and motion, of black children being terrorized by fire hoses and police dogs, both directed by police in the American South. Images viewed at 6:00 o'clock while eating dinner, or leafing through Life magazine waiting for a haircut. Only then did many white Americans understand what was happening in their country. Enough Americans briefly awakened from their somnolent state to begin questioning what was happening down in Alabama and Mississippi.
Cameras are powerful weapons when held by courageous citizens.
Here is a bit of history that explains where the police force in America came from: http://plsonline.eku.edu/insid...
... that people like Deray McKesson ignore the how there are so many more videos showing police officers helping than those showing brutality. He has an agenda, and won't let facts get in the way of spreading his FUD.
There are always bad apples in any group. Deray would have us believe that it's an overwhelming number and that nothing is being done to reduce it. Al Sharpton just wants any excuse to spread his racist remarks. And the media is there to help them, because pain and suffering and extremes sell, helping others does not.
It's really sad that the media (and Slashdot) gives these people so much air time, yet virtually ignores the many instances where police officers go out of there way to help people. It paints a jaded picture of an entire group of people simply because of the actions of a few.
It is highly doubtful that Michael Slager would have gotten away with what he did. It would have been quite easy to establish where he was at the time of the shooting, where the victim was, and in what direction he was facing. It would have been very simple to show he was not in any danger at all, and even without the camera, there was another eye witness.
All the camera did was get him fired and arrested a lot sooner.
And, of course Mr. McKesson fails to point out that cameras would probably have exonerated the officer int he Ferguson shooting much sooner, and many others cleared of charges.
Be careful what you wish for Mr. McKesson .The camera only shows one view and it doesn't necessarily prove what you would like it to prove.
I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
Not heroic. Not. The word has be abused to the point of meaninglessness. Stop saying "hero". In this case, the recorder didn't know what was to happen, was caught in the moment. We are daily surrounded by people reflexively photo- and video-recording everything and seeing nothing. Harrumph.
End the war on drugs. Take guns away from the cops. Deal with Police crimes seriously; no more sweeping this crap under the rug. Planting evidence is horrid.
Most of the time it has nothing to do with courage. They usually record so they can make money from it via the media. Other times it's to use it as ammunition to get of a ticket or an arrest.
This isn't police corruption, it's police brutality, which is a separate issue
It seems your relationship to law enforcement has made you either stupid or blind to what is what. Do you want to see what corruption looks like? It looks like this. Watch him drop the tazer next to the body. Shooting him was indeed brutality but there's a whole bunch of wrong going on here -- and we've heard complaints about both kinds. It's just that brutality gets a more sympathetic ear from the news and public. Nobody cares about the officer that didn't believe the lady living in the projects and so never did his due diligence as an officer of the law. But that attitude shatters her trust in law enforcement.
Grow up. Do yourself a favor and listen to this TAL radio segment and its sequel. But hey, keep lying to yourself and everyone else, whatever helps you sleep at night, right?
The site Sociological Images has data about the rate that cops kill and are killed in the USA. This article is a comparison between the use of guns in the USA vs the UK, but it does highlight the USA rates per civilian population per police population pretty well.
How's that going to work? Short of an EM pulse, I can't see it. But I'm willing to be enlightened.
It won't be long before video tickery will make such videos inadmissible in court because they will be immediate doubt as to their authenticity. But for now - mega kudos to the person who took the video in this case.
I'm glad someone does. The American media is a worthless shit show unless you're looking for biased (one way or the other) tongue wagging or stirring up outrage before all the facts are in. Again, this statement isn't talking about perceived "liberal" bias or "conservative-leaning" news like the shit show that is Cable news - it's the whole lot of them. They are too busy worrying about being first to report, that reporting facts is a distant second.
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
You may well have a point in general, but the Mail is a complete rag.
I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
My parents taught me not to talk to strangers, let alone discuss praising them in a Slashdot discussion thread
If you witness a murder unfolding, and you have a weapon, and can prevent it, do you have a duty use it to save the victim?
There is no substitute for common sense. Especially, no body of rules will do.
Unless we start kicking DA's out of office for being soft on blue crime...
Another counter in the securistas' arsenal is declaring by law that a cop's word is worth more than video: https://www.techdirt.com/artic... this madness has been attempted already and may even succeed.
Liberty - Security - Laziness - Pick any two.
"This isn't police corruption, it's police brutality,"
Same thing! Brutality is illegal and if no one is charged then that is corruption.
Covering for a bad cop makes someone a bad cop too.
If a man with a gun tells you not to video something, requests you to erase a recording or confiscates your phone, really what are you going to do about it? Doesn't matter what the law says until after the fact.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
that in the first-world shit-hole that the United States has become, a simple camera may be regarded as a weapon.
"corruption
krpSH()n/
noun
1.
dishonest or fraudulent conduct by those in power, typically involving bribery."
The officer is a liar.
The officer felt entitled to be free from accountability. That is the definition of corruption.
Former officer Slager is a corrupt liar.
Frank Serpico *still* gets death threats from LEOs he didn't even serve with, so yeah, I'm more inclined (as the video evidence increases) to think less Thin Blue Line and more Big Blue Klan.
For every hero that captures something like this, how many people turn into gawking bystanders with cameras instead of helping during a tragedy? In this case, the bystander may not have been able to help prevent the crime by inserting themselves into the situation and announcing their presence, but it's possible that if the cop had known that there was someone watching then the victim wouldn't have been shot 8 times (but then it's possible two murders would have been committed).
It seems that a lot of shock reactions have turned from helping to pressing record on your camera. During the Boston Marathon bombing, how many people just started recording instead of trying to help people that were injured (a lot, as a matter of fact)? I'm sure if smart phones had been around and as prevalent during 9-11, how many people would have hung around to record it? In many of these instances, hanging around to record a scene can be dangerous, yet it has become a natural reaction for some people to just hit record. While there always needs to be checks and balances on those that enforce the law, as they are in the end only human and subject to the same feelings and actions as anyone else, but is the general populace placing themselves in harms way the answer, especially when most people don't have any training to help themselves survive bad situations?
The most important app that you folks could make is one that just launching it, begins recording audio and video (along with GPS info) which is real-time streamed to the encrypted file storage holder of your choice (ACLU, EFF, Glen Greenwald, Anonymous, a BitTorrent service, etc.). It would also have local storage for later auto-upload if not a good enough signal at the time and gives the goons a false sense of security upon deleting / wiping / crushing the device. But the kicker is: neither those recording it, nor the device itself, will have the ability to delete the uploaded record.
Your list of items that "drive behaviors such as these" are in no way excuses for such behaviors.
Yes, LEOs have a tough job, but they signed up for something where there is a slimmer than usual margin of error or having a bad day. It is what it is, that's the nature of it, and they are expected and required to behave responsibly with the power and trust afforded them.
Providing such as list suggests that one turn a blind eye to such behavior, which must never happen in a free and open society.
However, what's worse than this type of behavior is the "protecting their own" mentality that is systematic among LEOs. Unless the "decent" LEOs you know are ready to report the activities of their "indecent" colleagues rather than cover them up, they're not really decent themselves - they're just thinking "well, it wasn't me" and being selective in who they consider a criminal. This *is* systematic and widespread.
It's both.
Brutality is when an officer beats or kills somebody without cause.
Corruption is when the system (rest of the police, courts, etc) covers for him/her.
NOTHING justifies shooting an unarmed fleeing man in the back when he's already 10 yards away.
Certainly it was NOT warranted in this case given the victim's background and the given circumstances.
However it is legal and justifiable when the person is a fleeing violent felon and there is an immediate and likely threat of death or severe bodily injury to others. Again, that was NOT the situation for this victim, but your absolute claim of "nothing" is entirely mistaken. Consider the Boston bomber, after the bombing, after shooting the cop, if he had been unarmed and attempting to flee shooting him would have been entirely justifiable and legal. Now that is an extreme example from the other end of the spectrum but it should make the point.
In many places, crimes against a police officer are tried more harshly than against regular citizens
I think it's more than fair that crimes committed by police officers - who hold a position of trust - also come with stronger consequences.
I think this is a pretty good example of UK cops keeping a suspect under control without letting things get out-of-hand.
In the USA (and possibly Canada) the guy may have ended up with a beating if not a tazing and/or bullet-holes.
Note that while they do point a tazer at the guy, they manage to take him down without harm. Heck, an off-duty cop even tells them to let up a bit.
Funny how white cops started shooting black kids as soon as camera phones became available.
Lay
Weakly typed languages will bring us armageddon
Hey, the issue with the police officer, to me that was MURDER, plain and simple. But, these "cell phone" recordings of incidents, usually start AFTER whatever altercation between the parties started. In other words, ONE SIDE of the situation is recorded, leaving the viewer, if they are going to be unbiased to wonder if something happened BEFORE the record button was pressed.
Speaking of Texas, a bill has just been introduced there (HB 2918) that prohibits filming the police within a radius of 25 feet, unless the person filming is a member of the "news media"- defined as an employee of 1) a newspaper that publishes at least once a week, 2) a magazine that publishes on a regular interval, or 3) a TV or radio station that is licensed by the FCC. Filming the incident yourself and forwarding the video to a newspaper, magazine, or TV station would make you guilty of a Class B misdemeanor, punishable by a 180 day jail term and a $2000 fine.
I hardly call moving sunglasses "planting evidence"
You are such a goddamn moron. Imagine this, you're a police officer, you've just committed a crime and you realize it when you see that the victim you just shot has no weapon. At this point, moving anything is tampering with the crime scene. You know this because -- wait for it -- you're a fucking police officer. And what do you do? You walk back to move a man's sunglasses over to his corpse? Goddamn you've posted this like eight times in this thread -- you really do take the cake.
"There is nothing more painful to me at this stage in my life than to walk down the street and hear footsteps and start thinking about robbery. Then look around and see somebody white and feel relieved.... After all we have been through. Just to think we can't walk down our own streets, how humiliating."
https://news.google.com/newspa...
Around 22 black men will get gunned down this weekend. Pretty much no white cop present, so no national headlines for them.
Assaulting a police officer and fleeing arrest are problematic behaviors unrelated to race. Some states do allow an officer to shoot-stop a person fleeing arrest, which can result in death. Chances are the person who died had a stack of active warrants, or drugs in the car, which are the usual reasons for fleeing a traffic stop.
Claims of racism are being uttered, evidence would usually involve spoken or written epithets, or other race-based ideologies in the perpetrator's background. None have come to light so far.
This case involves excessive force. It also involves social issues like nature and nurture, which led to the stack of warrants, and an officer gunning down a low life. It's a spectrum of issues, and the democratic left's "blue city" New York and Los Angeles propaganda streams consistently blame the police and only the police.
There's a reason that We the People divide into groups so well. It's some combination of nature and nurture. Women, blacks, jews, asians, christians all have aggregate differences at the group level that are measurable. Some differences are desirable, some not so much. The current zeitgeist shames and blames straight white males for these differences. It's probably more legacy issues than the actions of any person living today.
For example, asians and jews, regardless of wealth, tend to love and encourage their children long before they get exposed to the modern democratic left's education complex. They have unbreakable spirits that survive the withering negative messaging of the democratic party / public union education complex.
The other groups struggle. The legacy of christianity, slavery, the endless shaming and negativity in modern US history texts. Negative reinforcement is probably not the best way to nurture We the People into healthy, happy lifestyles. It does favor one of the political parties.
"Too much TV serials and very little of having a life makes us all disposable bodies for this new century"
Regarding the "police tend to confiscate phones and delete the video evidence" issue...why not use a method of recording that simultaneously saves a copy of the video in a private cloud storage service? Granted this is still not 100% foolproof, since once the police have the recording phone in their physical possession they could potentially gain access via the cloud storage app and also delete the file there. But, it's still an extra step of protection that could potentially help in some "they deleted the video" scenarios.
Or, how about this...a cloud storage service that requires a second different password to be manually entered (No "remember this password" setting) before any uploaded files can be modified or deleted? I do not know if any such services exist, but this would almost certainly prevent police from deleting the cloud copies even if they have physical access to the phone and the cloud storage app.
NO NO NO Fucker! You do not get to log in as AC and pretend that you were just joking. You are racist, plain and simple.
I want to know what rights as citizens we have when the police come up to us after taping a police interaction and they tell you that they need to take your phone as evidence. Now a smart person before filming would make sure that their pics and vids go straight to the cloud / dropbox and so if the phone goes bye bye you at least can get to your contents ASAP and pick up another phone on Ebay. You could see your IPhone 6+ that you just purchased go away and you would not get it back till a judge released it until the Iphone 10 came out. When my daughter was 13 her IPAD was taken in for evidence and the police still have it. No arrests have been made and all that really needs to be done is an image backup of the divice can be made and the item returned. She is now 18. You can't refuse to hand over a device to the police if they tell you it's evidence. So think about it. Would you guys willingly give up your phone to the police? Personally me, I would go down swinging.... I know the constitution says they can't deny you property without due process.
Paul E. Bahre
Maybe it's time to codify them?
...when the police black-out cell-communications & remotely erase all data on your phone.
In some cases this may be true. In others, it is simply a cowardly act of titillation, collecting content to be posted on one's favorite social network or other self-aggrandizement. We had a case a couple of weeks ago where a couple of teenage thugs attacked a geek working on his laptop on a metrolink (think subway without the tunnels) car. three against one in a car full of people, and not one person stood up to help the victim as he was sucker punched and repeatedly struck before the thugs left the train at the next stop. Great video made it on the evening news, however.
It didn't do Eric Garner any good for bystanders to record. The police are on a different level when it comes to justice... Charges for wrongdoing are inapplicable, even if you SEE them unquestionably commit it! Just how unfair are police? Have a look here. Notice how the cops point their lights right into the camera so they can approach without being identified!: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
I live in Montreal. Dawson College offers police training and deploma, Course contents range from legal, dealing with medical situations, anger management, Calming confronted people, Investigation, "Asking Questions first", weapon management, "driving" and civil rights. Its a two year course, open to men and wormen. I understand that all our hired police officers (men and women), have to graduate from this course. Our police forces are not just individuals taken from the streets, the police graduates chose policing as a career.
It is the first two years of an undergraduate courses for a Bachelors degree.
Leslie in Montreal