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Appeals Court: You Have the Right To Film the Police (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: A divided federal appeals court is ruling for the First Amendment, saying the public has a right to film the police. But the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in upholding the bulk of a lower court's decision against an activist who was conducting what he called a "First Amendment audit" outside a Texas police station, noted that this right is not absolute and is not applicable everywhere. The facts of the dispute are simple. Phillip Turner was 25 in September 2015 when he decided to go outside the Fort Worth police department to test officers' knowledge of the right to film the police. While filming, he was arrested for failing to identify himself to the police. Officers handcuffed and briefly held Turner before releasing him without charges. Turner sued, alleging violations of his Fourth Amendment right against unlawful arrest and detention and his First Amendment right of speech. The 2-1 decision Thursday by Judge Jacques Wiener is among a slew of rulings on the topic, and it provides fresh legal backing for the so-called YouTube society where people are constantly using their mobile phones to film themselves and the police. A dissenting appellate judge on the case -- Edith Brown Clement -- wrote Turner was not unlawfully arrested and that the majority opinion from the Texas-based appeals court jumped the gun to declare a First Amendment right here because one "is not clearly established."

180 comments

  1. No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't have the right to film the police.

    Trump 2020.

    1. Re:No you dont by AHuxley · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You have the right to film from public land.
      Police will try a few mind tricks at the more interesting sites. Courts, mil base, vital infrastructure, jails, prisons will usually create a chat down event.
      A demand, request for photo ID and the reason for walking on public and, having a camera on public land.. .
      Anything from a friendly request to "help" with the paperwork, a request to give a name, to a direct almost legal sounding demand for photo id.
      Other chat down methods are Who are you working for, Will this be on the net, under what account... Do you have police press ID?
      Mil, contractors and private security will often try the same with "chat downs" about been near their site. Still on public land but they have some "power" to ask who a person is well beyond their fence line...
      That the jail, base, court "extends" out onto public land past any fence, sign and that the ability to film from public land is not allowed is often attempted.
      The other trick is to let the person have their "rights" and follow them back to their car and get the plate and id..
      Other more direct methods is the undercover talking point. Not to show faces.
      Or a federal official with no ID or uniform might grab a camera to induce local police to be called. To report the crime a name will have to be given.
      The crime will be reported but later FOIA will never ID the person who reached out for the camera.
      A lot of chat down ways around a lack of clear Stop and identify statutes.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    2. Re:No you dont by knightghost · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Where is my right to privacy? It seems that you're saying I have none. Yet privacy is an established constitutional guarantee.

    3. Re:No you dont by alvinrod · · Score: 2

      In public it's generally held that you don't have the same kind of privacy you can expect in your own home. If you want privacy, you can stay there and keep people out or limit what they're allowed to do on your property. If you really want privacy, you could go buy a few acres off out in the hills and scarcely be bothered at all should you keep to yourself.

    4. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet privacy is an established constitutional guarantee.

      The constitutional right to privacy is only for women seeking abortions. It doesn't apply in other circumstances.

    5. Re:No you dont by AHuxley · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A persons rights cannot be taken.
      But if the chat down results in photo ID voluntarily been shown or the dslr/camera been handed over?
      If the chat down is loud, direct, friendly, helpful the person on public land might just show ID, stop filming or even hand over their camera.
      Been surrounded by mil in uniform, private security and/or local police on public land all suggesting it might be a good time to show ID and to turn off the camera?
      That police would like to or want to or need to know who a person with a camera is for their paperwork as they got called out..
      The ability to suggest that its now very normal, helpful, good to stop filming and hand over photo ID? Or just give up the media/storage to be a helpful as an investigation could be started..
      That line between under arrest, conducting an investigation, talking, been free to go, is having a dslr in public on public land reasonable articulable suspicion of a crime?
      Another attempt is to suggest press ID, local police press ID gives permission to film in that area or city... that all land in the state is state property and not really public land :)
      That very special permission is always needed to film "on" a mil base. "In" a court building due to informants or people in jail... or due to under cover officers..
      Anything to keep the conversation going and the person speaking about their rights...
      The hope is the person will then show photo ID just to have the ability to walk away after such creative talking points.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    6. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I forget, where does the Constitution specifically call out a right to privacy?

    7. Re:No you dont by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      "A persons (sic) rights cannot be taken."

      I doubt any of those in prison would agree.

    8. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like we need more deaf people performing these types of actions. Can't chat down a person who can't hear the chat. Might even be interesting (if unfortunate to the person doing the filming) to watch.

      "I am deaf, I cannot understand a word you are saying. I am deaf, I cannot understand a word you are saying, I am deaf, I cannot.. "*is tackled and cuffed*

    9. Re:No you dont by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      AC look for youtube video clips with terms like: Silent, first amendment audit

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    10. Re:No you dont by meerling · · Score: 1

      It has been affirmed in your home and in your papers, but has also been stated to not be relevant in public, because it is IN PUBLIC
      (ianal)

    11. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Here, it's called substantive due process. You're welcome.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantive_due_process

    12. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want privacy, stay home. While you are in a public location, you have no expectation of privacy. The same goes for the police.

      As long as the person filming the police isn't physically obstructing, then it's completely legal. Also, you do NOT have to identify yourself to police ever. You can't lie to them and tell them you're someone else, but you can remain silent or tell them you aren't going to identify yourself.

    13. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where's it say that? Fake news, it doesn't.

    14. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't, its fake news made up by the media. There is literally no mention of privacy anywhere in that document

    15. Re:No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't lose your rights, you give them up. If you want the freedoms of a civil society, you must act civilly.

      I do agree that once your time is served you should be made whole again.

    16. Re: No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, like the Branch Davidians

    17. Re: No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you go outside, people can see you.

    18. Re: No you dont by dougdonovan · · Score: 1

      why would you put yourself in a position as to where filming the police would benefit you.

    19. Re: No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you vote once you've served your time?

    20. Re:No you dont by Uberbah · · Score: 2

      Millions of people thrown into prison for drug use were acting perfectly civilly at the time of their arrest. So too were various political prisoners, namely minority activists.

    21. Re:No you dont by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      Recording you car license plate seem like fair game to me -- it's in plain sight on public land. The other things, best not to argue with someone holding a loaded weapon, document it as well as you can and take them to court. Why do you have a problem with them knowing who is recording them?

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    22. Re: No you dont by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Why do you think the only reason somebody would film the police is because it benefits them?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    23. Re:No you dont by 0111+1110 · · Score: 2

      Where does the constitution specifically call out a right to breathe or to eat? The constitution is not a list of human rights. It's a list of things the government is allowed to do. If it isn't in the constitution it is the government and not the citizen that is prevented from acting.

      In this case a police officer is the government. If the constitution does not specifically allow the police to confiscate cameras and harass citizens using them then they are not allowed to do so. But that is just theory. In practice they will often just beat you bloody, toss you in jail, and throw some false charges at you (cover charges). Or if you get particularly unlucky and the cop is having a bad day he might just shoot you or choke you to death or both.

      American police are usually themselves dangerous criminals and fucking with them in any way is indistinguishable from doing the same to an armed and pissed off gang member except that the gang member knows he could end up going to jail if he kills you. The cop knows he will at worst get a short paid vacation. The police are basically a gang themselves but one that is immune to all prosecution.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    24. Re: No you dont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes we DO!

      Impeach Trump NOW!!

    25. Re: No you dont by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      If you want to impeach Trump, the first thing you need to do is point to a law that he has broken. It must be a serious offence in order to qualify.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  2. How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While I totally support the right to record, whatever one can legally observe, I struggle to understand the commonly-used argument, that such making recordings — made silently and without expression — is somehow equivalent to speech.

    Could someone, please, explain?

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just because there's no talking doesn't mean it isn't speech. There are plenty of gestures that come to mind.

      Furthermore, if I made a video of myself describing everything that I saw when something happened, you would consider that speech. So making a video of it actually happening would also be considered speech.

      Speech is more about communication. That communication does not have to be done by talking.

    2. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 5, Informative

      The US Supreme Court has ruled that gathering evidence in support of one's claims -- particularly against the government -- is an integral part of the freedoms of speech and seeking redress. There's a huge difference between someone saying "X happened, trust me" and "X happened, here's video proof", especially when X is something they governed clearly should not be doing.

      That doesn't mean the right to record public servants is unqualified, but it's definitely broad.

    3. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      "something the government" should not be doing. Sigh.

    4. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by AHuxley · · Score: 2

      The US protects the right to collect information from public land and then talk about it.
      Freedom of speech, freedom after speech, freedom of the press to gather information for a story.
      Also a person does not have to invoke their rights by "speaking" a word or requesting their rights every time they are out in public.
      The police can attempt a chat down to request/demand/induce photo ID depending on the state.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    5. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by nctritech · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Ironically, it has been ruled that you must speak to assert your Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. I do not have a source to pass along, I just remember seeing that ruling go by one day and thinking "that's kinda stupid." I also don't think that people should have to identify themselves to police simply because police ask, but that doesn't stop it from being a requirement in several states.

    6. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then the great bear genocide of 2017 happened, as the people aggressively asserted their right to the arms of bears, or "bear arms" for short. ;-)

    7. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US Supreme Court has ruled that gathering evidence in support of one's claims -- particularly against the government -- is an integral part of the freedoms of speech

      Is that it? Gathering evidence?.. Well, OK...

      Would that the 2nd Amendment was interpreted just as liberally as the 1st though...

      Some parts of the Bill of Rights are more equal than others.

    8. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > How is FILMING "speech"?

      The First Amendment also includes freedom of the press.

    9. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Curate · · Score: 4, Funny

      Woe to those who have taken a vow of silence.

      Imagine if those who have taken a vow of celibacy had to fornicate just one little time to assert their right to remain celibate.

    10. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somehow they focused on the "right to remain silent" as if you had to be completely and totally silent in order to have protection. The phrase "right to remain silent" is not law, it's part of the Miranda warnings.

      That's not what the Constitution says. It says you may not be compelled to testify. Which is to say, you don't have to answer the police or prosecutor's questions, it doesn't mean you can't say anything you like beyond that.

    11. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      It would be rather chilling and funny if a camera crew or person with a dslr camera on public land needed to talk loudly about their rights at set intervals :)

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    12. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Problem I have with cop-block like groups are they do not simply record, they engage the Police and / or whomever is being detained. More people are getting involved because unfortunately despite rulings like this, Police continue to break the law with impunity. The Public has no other choice but to seek remedy there, on the spot, lest they spend years fighting it in various courts. It's not supposed to be like that.

      If we're expected to know the intricacies of an encounter with Police, including what stages grant what "rights" (Terry Stops for example), they sure as shit should have a solid, irrefutable understanding of the law. Laws against illegal search and seizure exist for a reason. Lethal use of force is authorized to the Public against Police in defense of those Rights, God help anyone engaging in such acts however.

    13. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by alvinrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The same way written text, or a drawing with no words, or any other form of expression is considered speech.

      The first amendment was created in a time when things like radio, television, the internet, etc. didn't exist and were perhaps beyond imagination. However, it's evident that the idea was ensure a freedom of expression, regardless of medium. I only wish they'd get the same fucking clue when it comes to the fourth amendment because computers and phones are pretty obviously covered by similar reasoning.

    14. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 2

      All the justices in Branzburg v. Hayes found that some kinds of newsgathering are protected by the First Amendment, although the court ruled that there was not an unqualified right of journalists to refuse to testify about what they knew. I don't know that any case's holding speaks directly to the question.

    15. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 2

      For additional citations, see also the US DOJ's amicus brief in a similar case before the 3rd Circuit. The core arguments start on page 18. (It doesn't look like the appeals court has ruled on that case yet, and I don't know when they will.)

    16. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The First Amendment also includes freedom of the press.

      I'm old enough to remember when that was true.

      https://www.washingtonpost.com...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    17. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 2

      Because the First Amendment doesn't just protect speech, but also freedom of the press. If the press can't observe and gather evidence, it can't be particularly effective.

      "Today's top story: the Government did stuff today. Probably. And now sports!"

      --
      Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
    18. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 1

      The Fifth Amendment doesn't give you the right to remain silent. It only protects you against self-incrimination.

      You can be compelled to testify against someone else. Pleading the 5th won't get you out of that, if you refuse you can be held in contempt. The reason you have to actually plead the Fifth is because you are telling the court why you refuse to answer.

      --
      Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
    19. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes it worse is that the bulk of decisions from the Supreme Court give allow a "reasonable" but WRONG interpretation of the law by a cop to outweigh the rights of the accused.

    20. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're all over the map here. Miranda warnings are law, unless you think law only means what a legislature passes. Also, you don't testify in an interrogation, that's something you do in court. So what is it you're trying to say?

    21. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Speech doesn't kill people.

    22. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not according to SJWs.

    23. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the matter? Banning Yiannopoulos is a-ok, but banning the NYT isn't?

    24. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Imrik · · Score: 1

      I think the point was more that making a video may not be speech, showing the video to someone else is speech.

    25. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the waxing incident of 2018 when people asserted their right to bare arms.

    26. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by meerling · · Score: 1

      Because it's art, and art is considered expression, and speech is considered to represent expression.
      A far more important question that is a bit off topic is how the fuck are corporations considered persons?!?!?!

    27. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Miranda is a requirement that police inform suspects of their rights - it does not define what those rights are. The actual Miranda case specified violations of the Fifth and Sixth amendments. The court did not require any particular wording for the warnings, just stipulated that suspects must be informed of their constitutional rights or the testimony gathered could not be used in court.

      How this came to mean "if you say anything at all, you have waived your right to remain silent" is completely baffling to me. As if that gives cops carte blanche to pressure you to talk. Under the Fifth, I have the right to say, or not say, whatever I choose - the only relevant legal question is, can it be used in court.

    28. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Or the Resistance, supporting the right to bear ohms.

    29. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think the point was more that making a video may not be speech, showing the video to someone else is speech.

      Sort of hard to show someone a video if you can't make it in the first place...

    30. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

      I think the point was more that making a video may not be speech, showing the video to someone else is speech.

      In which case, stopping someone from making the video would be prior restraint of speech....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    31. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by I75BJC · · Score: 5, Insightful

      An attorney told me that there is a difference between Asking and Ordering. Asking doesn't require an answer while Ordering does. LEOs can ask or order; the Citizen can respond appropriately. A Sheriff's Deputy told me that most civilians cannot tell the difference between Asking and Ordering. So they ask and are given information they want but are not legally entitled to. The task is to determine when the LEO is Asking or Ordering. It never hurts to ask for which the LEO is doing and responding appropriately. IMHO, much of the discussion here shows a misunderstanding of Asking and Ordering.

    32. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by I75BJC · · Score: 1

      Local police are trained to recognize sign language as Speech. So "silent" people are not out of luck. Nor do they tend to lack the skill of writing.

    33. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by iCEBaLM · · Score: 2

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

      Everyone calls the first amendment "free speech", but it also covers the press (aka, video recording), and peaceful demonstrating.

    34. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      While I totally support the right to record, whatever one can legally observe, I struggle to understand the commonly-used argument, that such making recordings - made silently and without expression - is somehow equivalent to speech.

      Could someone, please, explain?

      It basically involves the idea of journalists gathering information for a story, and anyone, yes anyone can be a journalist.

      You don't need credentials, you don't have to work for a news organization, period. Any citizen can be a journalist as per the 1st Amendment.

      So, the upshot is that anyone can gather information for a story, whether they intend to publish it or not. And that means that anyone can video or record ANYTHING that can be seen from a public vantage point without exception. That includes public officials and any members of the government.

      In other words, it is perfectly legal to stand on public property and video anything you can see, including the police and members of the public. The "eyes can't trespass", so anything you can see from a public vantage point is fair game.

      This was an important win for free speech and for journalism and for your basic rights as a citizen. Otherwise the police would be able to arrest you simply for photographing or videoing them without any crime being committed.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    35. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 0

      The Fifth Amendment doesn't give you the right to remain silent. It only protects you against self-incrimination.

      Actually, it does. You do not have to answer or respond to any question asked of you by a police officer or government official, even though they would like you to believe otherwise. You literally do not have to say one word to them, and that is your right. They cannot compel you to speak a single syllable.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    36. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      An attorney told me that there is a difference between Asking and Ordering. Asking doesn't require an answer while Ordering does. LEOs can ask or order; the Citizen can respond appropriately.

      That's right, and that's how so many cops get people to give them their ID when they actually have no right to get it. They do the "I need to see your ID" and they hold their fingers about 2 inches apart as if they were holding a driver's license. Most people will just hand it over without thinking. Not me. :)

      They also do the, "Hey do me a favor and ....", but that carries no more weight than if I asked you to do something. For fuck's sake, they're asking for a favor (and saying so!), not giving you an order.

      They can ask you anything they want, that doesn't mean you have to satisfy their request.

      (Even if they order you to do something it doesn't necessarily mean you have to do it. That's a whole 'nother subject, though.)

      When they tell me they "need" to see my ID in a situation where I'm not legally compelled to provide it, I tell them that their "needs" don't outweigh my "rights".

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    37. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 0

      except....

      in the US, you can LOSE YOUR LIFE if you go against a cop.

      you can be right.

      dead right.

      they are not to be trusted. they do not represent most of us, they definitely have an 'us vs them' mentality, and, for a current pulse on the mentality of cops, check this out - its current:

      http://io9.gizmodo.com/kentuck...

      still think cops are your friends? THINK AGAIN.

      its war and they have no plans to de-escalate.

      I fear cops. they can end you life and get away with it. while I like your idea of challenging them, its just - well - not good for your health, these days.

      dammit.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    38. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Right to remain silent is related to 4th and 5th not first.
      1st is to film, 4th/5th to not identify oneself.

    39. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 1st amendment provides freedom of speech and of the press. Recording falls under freedom of the press.

    40. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 1

      gathering evidence in support of one's claims -- particularly against the government -- is an integral part of the freedoms of speech and seeking redress

      Actually, no, I don't think that's a valid explanation. For example, this guy — who merely wanted to gather exactly the evidence you are talking about — was convicted of "entering a federal building under false pretenses". By the logic you are putting forth, all his actions should be covered by the First Amendment...

      Similarly, the computer hacking for stuff to publicly disclose later is merely "gathering evidence" for future speech... Heck, just about anything done in order to talk about it in the future must be protected by the First Amendment — rape and murder included — if we follow the proposed line of reasoning.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    41. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Those things are all crimes for reasons independent of the news-gathering function. In the instant case, the only reason police stopped the plaintiff was because he was recording video in a public place.

    42. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 1

      the only reason police stopped the plaintiff was because he was recording video in a public place.

      Sure. I accept and wholeheartedly agree, that the guy's recording is legal and should've been unmolested.

      I just don't see, how the First Amendment protects him in the slightest. Doing, what is not expressly prohibited by law is legal in a free country — you do not need it to be expressly allowed by an Amendment or anything else.

      The only possible charge I could see is disobeying a police order — had they ordered him to stop and he continued, they could've charged him with such disobeying, even if the order itself were later found invalid.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    43. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Imagine if those who have taken a vow of celibacy had to fornicate just one little time to assert their right to remain celibate.

      That's called seminary school, and apparently, what happens there, stays there.

    44. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      except....

      in the US, you can LOSE YOUR LIFE if you go against a cop.

      The same thing can be said about the guy that wants to beat you to the next stoplight or some schmuck standing in line behind you at the store.

      So fuck it, I'm not gonna lay down and let them walk all over me. They can kiss my ass if they think they're going to trample my rights without any resistance. I'm a law-abiding citizen and I won't let my rights be chipped away or stripped away, by the police or anyone else.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    45. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      So they're reinterpreting the constitution? Doesn't that lead to socialized medicine, death panels and compulsory gay marriage?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    46. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 2

      Judges can compel you to testify, just not against yourself.

      --
      Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
    47. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      Judges can compel you to testify, just not against yourself.

      They can "compel" you but they can't force you to say anything. You may or may not face penalties for it, but they can't make you speak.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    48. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 1

      Holy crap how pedantic can you be.

      --
      Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
    49. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      Holy crap how pedantic can you be.

      How pedantic do you want me to be?

      Unlike in many countries, in the US they can't torture you to make you speak or confess or incriminate yourself.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    50. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Why should public servants expect a right to privacy in public places where I myself cannot expect it?

      Or to put it in some of their own favorite words: If they've got nothing to hide, they've got nothing to fear. Given how deeply they believe that you should expect that their insistence against being recorded suggests that they do indeed have something to fear.

      If they were really smart, they'd copyright the design of their uniforms and just prevent the distribution of such recordings under a DMCA claim.

    51. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Altrag · · Score: 1

      It is stupid, but mostly because of an excessively literal usage of the word "silent." Being legally "silent" doesn't mean you can't fart or ask to go to the washroom.

      Likewise, vocalizing the phrase "I need to piss" doesn't necessarily count as "speech" as in the first amendment, because "speech" in that context is more about transfer of thoughts rather than strictly the act of using your mouth to form words.

    52. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 1

      People can only torture you in those countries. They can't "make" you speak.

      --
      Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
    53. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by rickyslashdot · · Score: 1

      minor correction :

      "That's called INseminary school, and apparently, what happens there, stays there."

      Well, it might be just possible that it may present its' lingering after-effect in 9 months -lol-

      --
      redneck geek
    54. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't mind corporations being considered persons if they could be put in prison.

    55. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Courts have generally held that public officials, like the general public, do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in public. Courts have speculated (because the question was not before them) that police officers might have a reasonable expectation of privacy in particular places, such as inside parts of a police station, where members of the public would not have a reasonable expectation of privacy. The reasons for that should be fairly clear. However, nothing in this case hinges on whether anyone had a reasonable expectation of privacy during the arrest of the videographer.

      Courts would reject, probably as frivolous and possibly with sanctions, any claim that copyright in a police uniform would prohibit recording police performing their duties (or breaking the law while in uniform) or distributing such footage.

    56. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      The First Amendment protects him because any law that purported to prohibit what he was doing would be unconstitutional due to 1A protections of his rights.

    57. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      People can only torture you in those countries. They can't "make" you speak.

      Wrong. When they shove a red hot poker up your ass, you'll speak.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    58. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I totally support the right to record, whatever one can legally observe, I struggle to understand the commonly-used argument, that such making recordings — made silently and without expression — is somehow equivalent to speech.

      Could someone, please, explain?

      Also see Tinker vs. Des Moines as well as Stromberg v. California.
      Both deal with "symbolic speech" or "expressive conduct".

    59. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 1

      The First Amendment protects him because any law that purported to prohibit what he was doing would be unconstitutional due to 1A protections of his rights.

      Please, explain your line of reasoning. One-liners do not cut it.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    60. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      The Constitution lays out a separation of powers between the federal and state governments. It empowers the federal government to do certain things, leaving other powers to the states or to the people. States are assumed to have general police powers, subject only to constitutional constraints. With the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, certain constitutional rights are "incorporated" against states -- so that while the state might have used its police powers to do things like prevent black citizens from voting, after the Fourteenth Amendment, that was no longer permitted. The First Amendment's protections for the rights of speech and petition for redress are among the rights that were incorporated against state governments. Thus, any state laws that purport to outlaw activities protected by the First Amendment would be unconstitutional, and every appeals court that has ruled on the question (including the one in this case) has ruled that recording police officers performing their duties in public is protected by the First Amendment.

      I don't understand what you think is so obscure.

    61. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 1

      I don't understand what you think is so obscure.

      What I do not understand — as should be obvious from the very title of my post — is how/why is filming considered in any way protected by (or even related to) the First Amendment.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    62. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      The First Amendment protects freedom of speech and freedom of the
      press. But “the First Amendment goes beyond protection of the press and the
      self-expression of individuals to prohibit government from limiting the stock of
      information from which members of the public may draw.” News-gathering,
      for example, “is entitled to first amendment protection, for ‘without some
      protection for seeking out the news, freedom of the press could be
      eviscerated,’” even though this right is not absolute. The Supreme Court
      has also recognized a First Amendment right to “receive information and
      ideas,” and there is “an undoubted right to gather news from any source by
      means within the law.” Furthermore, the Supreme Court has long recognized
      that the First Amendment protects film. A corollary to this principle is that
      the First Amendment protects the act of making film, as “there is no fixed First
      Amendment line between the act of creating speech and the speech itself.”
      Indeed, the Supreme Court has never “drawn a distinction between the process
      of creating a form of pure speech (such as writing or painting) and the product
      of these processes (the essay or the artwork) in terms of the First Amendment
      protection afforded. Although writing and painting can be reduced to their
      constituent acts, and thus described as conduct, we have not attempted to
      disconnect the end product from the act of creation.”

      (internal citations omitted)

      Does that save you enough of the effort of actually reading the material that was linked in the summary?

    63. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 1

      But “the First Amendment goes beyond protection of the press and the self-expression of individuals to prohibit government from limiting the stock of information from which members of the public may draw.” News-gathering, for example, “is entitled to first amendment protection, for ‘without some protection for seeking out the news, freedom of the press could be eviscerated,’” even though this right is not absolute.

      We are making the full circle, but let's try one more time. If it is the gathering of information (meant for later publication) that places video-taping under the protective wing of the First Amendment, why was not this guy's activity under the same protection?

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    64. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to repeat what I already told you.

    65. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to repeat what I already told you.

      Which was precisely nothing. Thank you.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    66. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Go back and read what I wrote earlier. It's not my fault that you don't understand simple English or how laws work.

    67. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club.

    68. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Constitutional rights don't give you the right to break other laws. In the case you mention, people entered a Federal building in disguise and fiddled with the phones. Those actions are themselves illegal, regardless of what legal or protected activities went on. If I stand on public property, or my own, and am videoing the police while maintaining clearance, I'm not breaking any other laws. Similarly, I have a right to say what I want. I don't have a right to walk into your home and start talking.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    69. Re: How is FILMING "speech"? by mi · · Score: 1

      Constitutional rights don't give you the right to break other laws. In the case you mention, people entered a Federal building in disguise and fiddled with the phones. Those actions are themselves illegal, regardless of what legal or protected activities went on.

      Very true, yes. Which only confirms, that the First Amendment has nothing to do with this — the actions of the video-taper are illegal or not depending on whether or not his video-taping (or any accompanying activity, such as entering under false pretenses or disobeying police order to stop) is illegal or not. That is, his video-taping is currently legal simply because there is no law making it illegal — not because it is somehow covered by the First Amendment.

      And if the State of Texas — or the city of Fort Worth — ever make it illegal to record police activity, Phillip Turner's future such actions will become just as illegal as those of James O'Keefe.

      Once again, I do not dispute that Phillip's actions were legal, and James' were not (in the case cited). Just that neither had anything to do with the First Amendment...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    70. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      We call it "interrogating" here in the USA, not torture.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    71. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      If the cop is not acting lawfully, then I am within my rights to kill said criminal in self defense. The fact that cops have so often acted unlawfully and as a group they are close to being a criminal organization gives me fear of them and I have the right to defend myself against anyone in blue who looks at me funny! They all deserve to die just for deciding to take the job and the fact that they haven't ratted out the corruption in their ranks makes them just as big of criminals as the "bad apples" that everyone likes to talk about. And the saying is actually "one bad apple ruins the whole bunch" not the way the police like to turn it around where it doesn't ruin the bunch. If you have ever had a pile of apple you know what one bad one can do.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    72. Re:How is FILMING "speech"? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      If the cop is not acting lawfully, then I am within my rights to kill said criminal in self defense. The fact that cops have so often acted unlawfully and as a group they are close to being a criminal organization gives me fear of them and I have the right to defend myself against anyone in blue who looks at me funny! They all deserve to die just for deciding to take the job and the fact that they haven't ratted out the corruption in their ranks makes them just as big of criminals as the "bad apples" that everyone likes to talk about. And the saying is actually "one bad apple ruins the whole bunch" not the way the police like to turn it around where it doesn't ruin the bunch. If you have ever had a pile of apple you know what one bad one can do.

      So, basically you're insane.

      You don't have the right to kill a cop who is not acting lawfully.
      You don't have the right to defend yourself against anyone in blue who "looks at you funny".
      And no, they don't all deserve to die just for deciding to take the job.

      Maybe it's time to up your meds, eh?

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  3. Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by rtb61 · · Score: 1

    So crazy Texas judge says not legal precedent can be set because no legal precedent has be set, hmm, OK, stays well are from crazy as fuck Texas legal system.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    1. Re: Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by Entrope · · Score: 2

      The question of whether the right is "clearly established" goes to whether the police get qualified immunity. If there was no clearly established right, they get qualified immunity, and don't have to stand trial. If the question goes to an appeals court, they are supposed to first determine whether the right exists -- after which it becomes clearly established, helping the next plaintiff -- and then whether it was clearly established before. They have to clearly establish whether the right exists before they can say whether it was already clear or not.

    2. Re: Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by rtb61 · · Score: 0

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precedent "In legal systems based on common law, a precedent, or authority, is a principle or rule established in a previous legal case that is either binding on or persuasive for a court or other tribunal when deciding subsequent cases with similar issues or facts" and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.... A bit technical for many, but the idea is, if challenged it keeps going higher and higher in the legal system.

      "Clearly established" in the case is just empty bullshit waffle, the judge clearly was avoiding the stupid statement, "no precedent has been set so no precedent can be set" basically IMO a chick shit judge who simply passed the buck. What he did establish precedent for, was 'a precedent can be set if that precedent has not be set', what a schmuck.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    3. Re: Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by Entrope · · Score: 1

      "Clearly established" is not "just empty bullshit waffle". Read the court's ruling. It pretty clearly explains why the courts must grant qualified immunity if there is not "clearly established" law protecting what the plaintiff was doing. And, as the article here states and I said, the appeals court here did make a precedential rule that the right to record police is "clearly established" from this point forward (in the 5th Circuit). The dissent said they should not have set that precedent, which is defensible under Pearson v. Callahan, but often bad jurisprudence.

    4. Re:Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      So crazy Texas judge says not legal precedent can be set because no legal precedent has be set, hmm, OK, stays well are from crazy as fuck Texas legal system.

      Texas judges are known to be a little...eccentric.

      https://thinkprogress.org/texa...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    5. Re:Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So are batshit crazy progressives linking to their own echo chambers.

    6. Re:Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by meerling · · Score: 2

      I've lived in texas, and it's not very sane down there. It's my policy to stay away from anything doing with texas completely.

    7. Re:Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by Mashiki · · Score: 2

      Yeah, and linking to think progress is the best example of a self-reinforcing echo chamber with a side of propaganda.

      After all, one can see what happens when progressive replacements get into power. Laws? Nope, those are for little people. And illegals? No, those are "guests" who should just be set free. That also includes violent offenders who've committed murder, rapes and so on. I'm sure you're happy with that policy right? Who doesn't want a murderer simply released back on the street. Or putting a rapist right back out, it's not like rape isn't a repeat offender crime or anything. Or a crime that escalates into further violent acts.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    8. Re:Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      Yeah, and linking to think progress is the best example of a self-reinforcing echo chamber with a side of propaganda.

      There is a video of the guy saying that Obama was going to lead the United Nations and invade Lubbock, Texas. You can ignore the "propaganda" and just listen to the judge in his own words if you are afraid of being infected by the dangerous thoughts of Think Progress..

      I mean, I don't know if you've ever been to Lubbock, Texas, but don't nobody go there by choice.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    9. Re:Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      There is a video of the guy saying that Obama was going to lead the United Nations and invade Lubbock, Texas. You can ignore the "propaganda" and just listen to the judge in his own words if you are afraid of being infected by the dangerous thoughts of Think Progress..

      Having worked in Texas, it's very similar to working in Alberta. They've got a strong independent streak, and a similar belief that their place is theirs. You could have of course linked to the video without giving clicks to think progress though right? But you didn't. It's also not the "dangerous thoughts" it's the outright fabrications, lies by omission, quote mining and full-on narrative crafting that they engage in. They're a pure propaganda organization, and using them as any form of a source would be like using "anti-vaxxer news" to show people why vaccines cause autism.

      I mean, I don't know if you've ever been to Lubbock, Texas, but don't nobody go there by choice.

      Really? I've been in quite a few shitholes before, but Lubbock doesn't even rank in the top 50. That's reserved for places like Chicago, Shanghai, Toronto and so on.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    10. Re:Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1, Funny

      Really? I've been in quite a few shitholes before, but Lubbock doesn't even rank in the top 50. That's reserved for places like Chicago, Shanghai, Toronto and so on.

      You're right. The Lubbock Opera House is one of the wonders of the civilized world.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    11. Re: Texas Catch 22 Injustuce System by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Happiness is Lubbock TX in the rear view mirror" Mac Davis

  4. Dear Judge Edith Brown Clement: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Would you also say that the police don't have a right to film citizens? What about all the corporate-operated CCTV cameras everywhere, should those go too? If it all goes away, maybe that's a good exchange. If you're saying everyone EXCEPT ordinary citizens can use video cameras, I have to ask why you get to hold that gavel.

  5. But this is a LEAK! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ban the LEAKS!

    Fake News! It's TRUE! But it's LEAKED! So it's FAKE!

  6. establish rights? by ooloorie · · Score: 3, Insightful

    - wrote Turner was not unlawfully arrested and that the majority opinion from the Texas-based appeals court jumped the gun to declare a First Amendment right here because one "is not clearly established."

    Under the US Constitution, you don't have to "clearly establish rights"; rather, the government has to clearly establish that it has been granted certain powers by the people.

    1. Re:establish rights? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      If a plaintiff wants to sue government individuals as individuals for violating the plaintiff's civil rights, the officials will almost certainly assert qualified immunity, at which point the plaintiff must demonstrate the officials' actions violated "clearly established" law.

      If a plaintiff cannot or will not do that, he or she can only sue the government entity, not the officials in a personal capacity.

    2. Re:establish rights? by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      at which point the plaintiff must demonstrate the officials' actions violated "clearly established" law.

      My point is that the court reasoned as if the plaintiff needed to "clearly establish a right"; under US law, you should not have to clearly establish that you have rights, the government should have to clearly establish that it has the powers that it is exercising. The reasoning of the court is abhorrent, albeit distressingly common: US courts have started treating Americans like European peasants.

    3. Re: establish rights? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Then kindly say what you mean. Don't say "you do not have to" do a thing when you mean "you should not have to do" that thing. The rules about qualified immunity were spelled out by the Supreme Court; this appeals court is bound to follow that precedent.

    4. Re: establish rights? by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      Then kindly say what you mean.

      I did say what I mean: I made a general comment about the distinction between "establishing rights" and the granting of powers. Nowhere in my comment did I say anything about the ruling itself. Apparently, you simply can't read.

    5. Re: establish rights? by Entrope · · Score: 1

      You stated what you think the Constitution should mean, but phrased it as an accepted or actual state of affairs. Don't get pissy just because someone pointed out that your comment was either wrong or extremely poorly phrased, depending on how generous a reader is being.

    6. Re:establish rights? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, the decision was not about whether plaintiff had the right to make the video. The decision was about exactly what legal remedies the plaintiff had. Clearly the plaintiff's rights were violated by law enforcement and the plaintiff was able to sue the city for damages. There's no question of that.

      However, should the police who hassled the plaintiff be individually liable? Since it's impossible to know exactly what's legal and what isn't, and some things cannot be determined to be legal before a trial, police get a partial shield: if they operated in reasonably good faith, and they didn't do anything they should know is illegal, they are not individually liable. A "clearly established" right is one the police should individually know and respect, and which they can be held liable for disrespecting.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  7. Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wonder if this affects mmel and twx's secret sex filming of underage boys

    1. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, just yours.

  8. Film? It's 2017. Who films any more? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Along with 'tape'. The word you want is 'record'.

    Some idiot judge will take the words literally and say you have a right to film but not record.

    1. Re:Film? It's 2017. Who films any more? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I found some words to properly describe you: moron, asshole, misses the point, and terminology nazi.

    2. Re:Film? It's 2017. Who films any more? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well they may be an arsehole instead of asshole but ill give you the benefit of the doubt that you are a typical asshole who thinks the whole world ends at your own countries borders of your perfect law abiding pathetic life.

  9. Be careful what you wish for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except he was filming BEFORE X happened.
    With such a broad claim, you realize that it applies to people videoing other people for evidence of possible future crimes, and government surveillance as evidence collecting against possible future crimes.

    Be careful of what you wish for.

    It's not a good thing, that a you tuber can spy on anyone, video them, publish their every actions, and then claim it's free speech.

    1. Re:Be careful what you wish for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      1st amendment protects citizens, not the government.

      Filming is almost universally allowed - but there's a lot of restrictions on dissemination of the material afterwards. In particular right to privacy restricting right to publish that material without express permission.

  10. Judge Clement didn't say you can't film police by raymorris · · Score: 5, Informative

    Judge Clement's dissenting opinion did not say that citizens aren't allowed to film the police.

    This hearing was about whether he should just sue the city, or of he could also sue the individual officers personally, given the particular details of the events, and the particular circumstances at the time. The law on this question depends on those details.

    Clement believes that the city is liable in this particular instance, not the individual officers personally.

    There's no general principle at being decided in this case. Though it was mentioned that citizens generally have a right to film police in the conduct of their duties, that was settled law - as the the opinion mentioned, there is no circuit court split or anything on that question.

  11. Rights vs. Facts by buss_error · · Score: 4, Insightful
    One my have the "right", but to any annoyed cop, that won't stay the baton to the face, the chrome bracelets, and the ride to jail. As the saying goes, "You might beat the rap, but you won't beat the ride." Until immunity is limited, and some type of consequences attain to violation of the law, bad actors in LEO will continue to behave badly. When a cop violates the law, and the taxpayers fund their defense even in the most egregious of circumstance, there is little motivation for departments or individuals to root out and stop abuse from bad cops. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

    We are fortunate that there are few bad actors, but we are unfortunate that their brothers and sister officers are usually very reluctant to report those that are.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    1. Re:Rights vs. Facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One my have the "right", but to any annoyed cop, that won't stay the baton to the face, the chrome bracelets, and the ride to jail. As the saying goes, "You might beat the rap, but you won't beat the ride."

      And white conservatives wonder why some people feel that the police are an occupying force not to be trusted.

    2. Re:Rights vs. Facts by buss_error · · Score: 2
      And white conservatives wonder

      Some may, but the many white conservatives are quick to assume and project, denigrating the subject of the beating by sneering "you need a safe place snowflake?" and shouting "DEPORT THEM!".

      Oddly enough, white conservatives are the ones that squeal the loudest if they are unfortunate enough to experience a rights violation. I do not think any rights violation should evoke schadenfreude no matter the subject, but I do sometimes have to remind myself of that. I am bitterly disappointed that as a society, we can't agree that skin color shouldn't make a difference in your rights, or that being "illegal" somehow strips the protections of law such as a lawyer, speedy trial, and other rights. The reasons these should apply to anyone citizen or not?

      Because there are more than 10,000 citizens illegally deported. The next one could be you.

      --
      Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    3. Re:Rights vs. Facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The only fix to that is swift, decisive, and extremely harsh punishment for abuses of the law; as opposed to free all-expenses-paid vacations like they instead currently get.

      If using the baton and arresting someone illegally, that shouldn't JUST cost you your job: that's assault with a deadly weapon, and kidnapping to boot. People with power over others MUST be held to a higher standard: The stick MUST be at least twice the size of the carrot, and never a carrot of its own!

    4. Re:Rights vs. Facts by cbraescu1 · · Score: 1

      Because there are more than 10,000 citizens illegally deported

      That's a very disturbing claim. Do you have any proofs?

      --
      Catalin Braescu
      Ofaly.com
  12. Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by raymorris · · Score: 5, Informative

    The hearing was about whether he should sue only the city of Fort Worth, or also sue the individual officers personally.

    The law about that is the officer os personally liable for monetary damages only if *all* reasonable cops would know that what they did was unconstitutional, because there was clearly established law covering those specific actions in that particular circumstance. In all other cases, the offended party can sue the city or state that the cop works for.

    A couple of examples:

    A cop is interviewing a suspect. When the suspect just sits there, refusing to talk, the cop hits the suspect with a stick in an attempt to force a false confession. The officer would be personally liable because it's *clearly established* that such behavior is violates the suspect's Constitutional rights. No reasonable cop could think it's okay to hit the guy.

    On the other hand:
    Two weeks after a police station in Dallas is shot at, a guy is hiding in bushes across the street from a police station near Dallas. Cops approach to see what's going on. The guy is filming the police station (casing it?). Cops ask for ID. The guy asks to speak to a supervisor. The cops call their supervisor to come over, handcuffing the guy for five minutes until the supervisor arrives. Did they violate his Constitutional rights? Maybe. Does every reasonable officer *know* that what they did violates his civil rights? No, an officer might reasonably *think* it's okay to cuff the guy for five minutes. There's not *clearly established law* that in the situation described, they can't cuff him while awating the supervisor he requested. Therefore he can sue the city the cops work for, but can't sue the individual cops personally.

    The second scenario above, in which a reasonable cop might mistakenly think cuffing him for a minute is okay, is patterned after the actual events in this case. In reality, he wasn't hiding in the bushes. I added that to make it a better example, an example of a scenario where a reasonable cop might be unsure of what they can and can't legally do.

    1. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by AHuxley · · Score: 2

      If the person is not on police property?
      How far back is that "in bushes" or "across" zone? A street, a few streets? One block? Given a zoom on a better quality video camera?
      Does a person need to be in the bushes? What if they are smart and are not really hiding? Standing next to a tree? Walking near a tree that they could hide behind later? Member of the press looking for the bush where the person got handcuffed? A tourist? A member of the public? Another First Amendment audit near the bushes after what happened to the last person with a camera in that area?
      Is the bush on public or private land? Is everyone near that bush stopped? Just some people? Or only people with a camera?
      Most police just follow a person back to their car or home and get their ID that way :)
      If the police don't want cameras then do want police have always done. Have a drive in area with two gates. The gate opens to a closed in area, drive in, gate closes. Any camera can only capture what any one walking by can see. A very low cost sally port.

      After the city keeps on going to court, the supervisor will have to have a meeting about how people can still wonder around in public with a camera.
      The cheap option for the city is to send out a person to talk to and photograph interesting person hiding/in the bushes. Use the facial recognition and see how the person hiding responds to been talked, confronted to and been photographed.
      No uniform, no police ID, no handcuffing. Just a talking and standing in front of the persons camera.
      Just two random people with cameras.
      The First Amendment audit person, tourist will soon request police help after such an unexpected and very direct interaction with a total stranger.
      The resulting need for police interaction will be a very easy way to ID the interesting person.
      No expensive rights issues, no handcuffs needed.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    2. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given their duty is to enforce laws, and they are empowered to specifically deal with and - when necessary and legally appropriate - abridge some of these rights (like searching you with a warrant), it is flatly unacceptable for them to NOT know whether or not what they are doing with the tools and techniques they were taught violates constitutional rights.

      And as we are *often* told; not knowing is no excuse when breaking laws.

    3. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point. I'm not concerned with the details or the outcome of the case, but the reasoning. Under US law, you should not have to clearly establish that you have rights, the government should have to clearly establish that it has been granted the powers that it is exercising. The reasoning of the court is abhorrent, albeit distressingly common: US courts have started treating Americans like European peasants.

    4. Re: Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by Entrope · · Score: 1

      And you're missing the point several times over. Qualified immunity is not about requiring a plaintiff to demonstrate their rights before they can sue the government over infringements of those rights. It only applies when they want to sue government officials in a personal capacity, rather than the government itself. The rule exists because without something like it, government officials would not vigorously enforce laws due to the risk of civil liability.

    5. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      an example of a scenario where a reasonable cop might be unsure of what they can and can't legally do.

      The funny thing is, as a civilian, "ignorance of the law is no excuse".

      But a police officer, "I thought it was the law" is an excuse.

    6. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by mrsam · · Score: 2

      Your second case is a red herring.

      Turner was not "hiding in the bushes across the street from a police station near Dallas", as you implied. Did you watch the video?

      Turner was plainly standing, out in the open, on a public sidewalk. He was clearly unarmed, and posed no threat. All he had was a camera, and all he was doing was filming.

      It might be reasonable for the police to come out and try to talk to him. But do you believe that, under these circumstances, it was reasonable to handcuff him, throw him in a police car on a hot day, with the windows rolled up, supposedly based on some bogus law that the cops pulled out of their ass, right that very minute?

      It is now beyond dispute that Turner did not violate any law. The appeals court has ruled that. Furthermore, the appeals court has ruled that Turner was arrested. This is not arguable, either. Did you read the court's decision? The court's decision is very reasonable, in that regard: when you get handcuffed, that means you are under arrest. Plain and simple. It is now an established fact, that Turner will no longer need to prove, when he goes back to the trial court (the appeals court reversed most of the trial court's decision, so the whole thing goes back for further legal proceedings). He was arrested by the cops. For standing on a public sidewalk, for filming a police station. Neither will Turner has to prove that he did not break any laws. That was a part of the appellate court's decision too. Of course, one never has to prove that, when being charged with a crime, but it is Turner who's suing the cops, claiming that he did not break any laws, so he had to prove that, and the appellate court now agreed with him.

      But, going back to the subject matter at hand. Do you believe that the cops were in the right, arresting a man standing in plain sight, on a public sidewalk, completely unarmed, simply for filming a police station?

    7. Re: Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      Qualified immunity is not about requiring a plaintiff to demonstrate their rights before they can sue the government over infringements of those rights.

      I'm not saying anything about qualified immunity or the merits of the case. I am admonishing people to stop talking about "infringements of rights". Americans aren't European peasants.

    8. Re: Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by Entrope · · Score: 1

      This court decision is specifically about qualified immunity for the police officers. If you want to talk about something else, like the way you imagine the Constitution works,please make it clear that you're changing the subject.

    9. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      On the other hand: Two weeks after a police station in Dallas is shot at, a guy is hiding in bushes across the street from a police station near Dallas. Cops approach to see what's going on. The guy is filming the police station (casing it?). Cops ask for ID. The guy asks to speak to a supervisor. The cops call their supervisor to come over, handcuffing the guy for five minutes until the supervisor arrives. Did they violate his Constitutional rights? Maybe. Does every reasonable officer *know* that what they did violates his civil rights? No, an officer might reasonably *think* it's okay to cuff the guy for five minutes. There's not *clearly established law* that in the situation described, they can't cuff him while awating the supervisor he requested. Therefore he can sue the city the cops work for, but can't sue the individual cops personally.

      The second scenario above, in which a reasonable cop might mistakenly think cuffing him for a minute is okay, is patterned after the actual events in this case. In reality, he wasn't hiding in the bushes. I added that to make it a better example, an example of a scenario where a reasonable cop might be unsure of what they can and can't legally do.

      Actually, I don't think that would be legal, and there is clearly established law that the cuffing is at least a detention requiring reasonable suspicion. It's been well established that they can pat the guy down for weapons legally, and that should be sufficient to assuage their concerns - cuffing someone simply because they refuse to give their ID would be unreasonable.
      In this particular case, you'll note that the officers actually won the appeal (affirming qualified immunity) on the first amendment claim and the fourth amendment claim for unlawful detention, but lost on the fourth amendment claim for unlawful arrest. As the court noted, "an investigative detention must be temporary and last no longer than is necessary to effectuate the purpose of the stop.” Specifically:

      ... the officers were not taking investigative steps to determine who he was (aside from repeatedly asking him for identification) or what threat he might have posed. Neither does anything in the amended complaint suggest that Turner had a weapon, was using his hands in a threatening way, or otherwise posed a threat that required such restraint. The officers’ handcuffing Turner and placing him in the patrol car, as alleged in the amended complaint, were not reasonable under the circumstances. We conclude that a reasonable person in Turner’s position would have understood the officers’ actions “to constitute a restraint on [Turner’s] freedom of movement of the degree which the law associates with formal arrest.”

      In your hypothetical, the cops handcuff the guy while waiting for the supervisor that he asked for. They're not taking further investigative steps to determine who he is or what threat he might have posed, and he hasn't done anything to indicate he poses a threat. Just like in this case, handcuffing the guy would be unreasonable, and would likely be considered retaliation for 'being uppity' and 'contempt of cop' for daring to ask for a supervisor.

    10. Re: Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it ok for me to do it to a cop? If not, then it shouldn't be legal for them to do it to me. As a citizen, I can do a citizens arrest. The difference between me and a cop is that the cop is indemnified against most things if acting under the color of flag, aka doing cop shit. They should NOT be indemnified against being a shitty cop.

    11. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by raymorris · · Score: 1

      > Actually, I don't think that would be legal

      I don't necessarily disagree. Certainly it would still be questionable, which was the point - a scenario where it's not 100% crystal clear.

      > the cops handcuff the guy while waiting for the supervisor that he asked for. They're not taking further investigative steps

      That's a reasonable argument. It could also be argued that getting the supervisor's assistance *is* a further step. Of course in this case it seems at least one cop was acting out of anger.

      As you noted, even in this case, in which he wasn't hiding, it was slightly unclear which amendment(s) apply. Therefore if the situation were a bit different, with him hiding in the bushes etc, I think it would be possible for a well-meaning cop to mess up.

    12. Re: Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only an excuse if it's a citizen, it's a reason when it's an officer of the court. Reminds me of Frontline offer excuses, management has reasons.

    13. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      You're nitpicking, and the essence of the shield laws is that nitpicking doesn't matter when suing individual police officers. It can matter a lot in other legal actions. However, if a police officer does something that the hypothetical reasonable police officer doesn't know is definitely illegal, that police officer is considered to have acted in good faith, and is not individually liable. In that case, the appropriate government body can be sued, but not the individual officer.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    14. Re:Can't sue cops *personally* for requesting ID by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Just been on public land is not a crime in most areas.
      In some nations you don't get to take pictures of gov/mil buildings or police.
      But such laws are very well understood by locals. Signs, advice, chat downs to tourists soon inform them that they don't get to photograph "that" building.
      If a site in the US does not want to be photographed? Buy a fence, use a fence as a sally port or find more open land with a big fence and work in a distant hanger like building.
      Find a tall building with very well designed windows in the city.
      Photographers can then wonder the streets, hide in bushes, walk around the entrances on public land and will see nothing more that what is on internet mapping apps. CCTV will get facial recognition and is kept for many months.

      Or a "worker" will walk out of the building and take a photo of the interesting person. No ID is shown. Could be federal gov staff, mil out of uniform, a contractor, private security, no attempt to talk is made, the worker returns to the building with a very good quality image of the interesting person for facial recognition. No handcuffs to allow a lawyer to start discovery later, no FOIA to the local police to see who responded to what and why, no ID so no working out who is in the building, no telling the interesting person who or what is in that gov/private sector building.
      If that fails a person will walk up to the interesting person outside and stand in their space until local police attend. The interesting person will then show ID due to the issues that got induced.
      Been allowed to rush out to handcuff random people on public land is legally risky and very interesting for any legal team.
      It also shows response time and who is in the building and who quickly they feel they need to rush out with handcuffs.
      Most gov/mil/contractors are more aware never to give that kind of information away just for a person on public land in a bush..
      Most attempts like that happen near the edge of a mil base by local law enforcement or near very sensitive sites.
      The ability to make up some law to handcuff a person on public land is often lacking as the person never crossed onto gov/mil/private land.
      The chat down attempts to be so loud, direct that the person just gives photo ID.
      Handcuffs are often not needed as it allows for discovery, FOIA, other officials to get officially called in, paperwork that opens FOIA requests at a city, state level.
      i.e. the story is been handcuffed on public land with the 'laws' been quoted and most police forces have finally worked that out and try not to provide that kind of result on public land due to the video clips been on the internet hours later.
      Not good for local elections if the first video found is local police handcuffs person in public quoting fake laws. Anyone searching that town, city or state for the next decade finds a series of videos about been handcuffed on public land and city/state "laws" been quoted.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  13. Film? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if I want to record instead, I don't have any devices that use film.

    Is this just a poorly written article or a loophole so that you still cant record police with modern tools?

    1. Re:Film? by PPH · · Score: 1

      Just poor writing on the part of Arse Technica.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  14. 5th Circuit is in New Orleans by davidwr · · Score: 1

    It is NOT "Texas-based."

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  15. Yeah by Ryanrule · · Score: 1

    Do live broadcasts. They cant delete that from your phone.

    1. Re:Yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they can delete YOU. Permanenty. All it takes is if for someone to shout "GUN!" and BRRRAPPP, your head explodes in a shower of blood and brains.

    2. Re:Yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be some interesting live stream material.

    3. Re:Yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IF it ever gets streamed...

  16. Yay for the Batt!* by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

    I've followed Phillip Turner's 1st Amendment audits for a long time and it was very good to see him prevail in court. Very, VERY good.

    This was a huge win for everyone in the US that gives a damn about the 1st Amendment.

    *(His Youtube channel is "The Battousai", so people call him "Batt" or the Batman.)

    You have the absolute right to film the police in public, period. Watch and learn, kids: https://www.youtube.com/user/T...

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  17. Re: Donald Trump by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's because they were shot.

    Do you seriously want this country to kill the weak and disabled, and put the rest to labor? What is wrong with you?

  18. This ruling wasn't about plaintiff's rights by raymorris · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apparently I didn't make my point clear enough:

    This ruling wasn't about whether or not the guy had the right to film the cops. (Yeah the summary is misleading. Without looking back at it now, I'm going to guess it was by Beau "clickbait" HD).

    > the government should have to clearly establish that it has been granted the powers that it is exercising. The reasoning of the court is abhorrent

    You're contradicting yourself there because the dissent you're objecting to says that the government owes the guy money, because the government infringed his rights.

    Furthermore, "the reasoning of the court", which you call "abhorrent" says that not only should he sue the government, but also the individual officers as well.

    The really funny part is this - the dissent, which is what you actually don't like, I think, is based on the argument that sometimes court rulings can be hard to completely understand - a point you're proving well by completely misunderstanding the topic of this hearing.

    1. Re:This ruling wasn't about plaintiff's rights by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      This ruling wasn't about whether or not the guy had the right to film the cops.

      And I wasn't commenting on the ruling, I was commenting on the language.

      The really funny part is this - the dissent, which is what you actually don't like,

      No, what I don't like is the notion of "rights" that need to be "established". Even the attorney for the plaintiffs uses the language involving "clearrly established rights".

  19. You just agreed with judge you're mad at by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > the government should have to clearly establish that it has the powers that it is exercising.

    That's what she said. Where "she" is the judge you're pissed off about. Basically this is what has happened:

    Judge: 2 + 1 = 3
    ooloorie: No, damn it! 2 + 1 is 3 you fucking idiot!

    The key word in what you said is "the government". According to the dissent (and the majority also agrees on this point), the government violated the guy's rights. Maybe they didn't train the officers well enough or whatever, but anyway the city of Fort Worth is going to have to pay the guy. All the judges agree with you. They all agree the government is in the wrong (or may be, that wasn't in question at this hearing).

    Where one judge disagrees with the others is on the topic of this ruling - what should be done about the individual cops involved. In many instances, two different courts make opposite rulings on some question*. The fifth district court says "these cops can do X in these circumstances", the sixth district says "cops can't do X in these similar circumstances". Then some cop does X in some other, similar circumstances. Judges don't even agree if what the cop did is okay or not. Should the *cop*, personally, be sued, or is the government who employs and trains the cop liable? That was the question in this case. The dissent said basically "cops aren't required to be smarter than judges. If it's unclear, sue the police department, not the individual cop."

    "Clearly established" doesn't have anything to do with the *government*. "Clearly established" is the standard eaxh individual cop is *personally* held to - they don't have to understand the law better than judges do.

    * The one other person here who actually read the ruling will note that in order to more clearly explain the -general idea- to ooloorie, I've intentionally given up precision. I realize that, but I'm trying to get ooloorie to understand what the purpose of the hearing was and why "clearly established" matters.

    1. Re:You just agreed with judge you're mad at by ooloorie · · Score: 1

      The key word in what you said is "the government". According to the dissent (and the majority also agrees on this point), the government violated the guy's rights.

      Again, you are not listening: I'm objecting to the notion and language that Americans have specific rights that can be violated. That is a view of justice and the law that applies to European peasants, it is not what we have in the US. In the US, citizens don't have rights that can be violated, government has (limited) powers that can be exercised. This has nothing to do with the specific outcome of the case, nor with whether police, the judges, or you are misusing the language; in fact, the lawyers for the plaintiff themselves are misusing language in their complaint. Once you talk about "establishing rights" of citizens, you have already submitted yourself to an all-powerful state, and whether you win specific cases doesn't matter anymore.

      Judge: II + II = III
      ooloorie: No, damn it! 2 + 1 is 3 you fucking idiot! If you use Roman numerals, you may get the right result for small numbers, but you can't do complex science or engineering that way.

      FTFY.

    2. Re:You just agreed with judge you're mad at by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      It's a combination. The Federal government has certain restricted powers, but the US Constitution places few restrictions on what states can do. However, there are things no government in the US can constitutionally do, and those are generally considered rights. These are something of a short circuit of government power. If my right to speak freely is violated, my lawyer doesn't have to go through the law carefully to make my case, since it really doesn't matter whether or not any applicable law is a reasonable extension of constitutionally granted powers, since I have a Constitutional right to free speech.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  20. Not if they are mad about today. VIOLATED by raymorris · · Score: 2

    Rights can be violated and rights can be infringed.

    Suppose the last year the government put you in prison for saying "Obama sucks". This year, you're still in prison. Are your rights being violated this year?

    I would say yes, as long as you're still in prison, your rights are still being violated. Agreed?

    I would also say it's impossible to violate a non-existent right someone doesn't have. Agreed?

    If your rights are being violated today, you must have rights today, rights that are being violated. If you have rights that are being violated, your rights weren't taken away; they were violated, not removed.

    This may sound pedantic, but it's important. There are reasons the Constitution and the Declaration say that the government may not *infringe* your human rights, which you were born with. They don't say that the government should grant you rights, or shouldn't take them away. They say you're born with certain human rights, you die with those rights, and all the government can do is either infringe your rights or protect your rights.

    This is important when the government purports to curtail or remove your human rights. If it was possible for the government to create or remove rights, we might disagree about which rights should be taken from whom. We might dislike having certain rights removed, get annoyed for a bit about having our rights taken away, then get over it - the government can take our rights if they choose too, so we'd just have to get over it. The founders took a different view - our human rights are a part of being human, they are permanent, and no government can ever remove them, only protect or violate them.

    Possibly more importantly, any definition of "rights" which allows government to grant them turns rights into "privileges". It removes the essential nature of rights, as opposed to "privileges" or "license". Government-granted or removed rights are no right at all, merely a statement of "we'll let you do that, because we don't mind you doing that - for now. We'll let you know when it bugs us and you have to stop". That's not a right. A right is something I can do *even if* it annoys politicians.

  21. Fake News is Ancient News by SumterLiving · · Score: 2

    I've had all the claims of "fake news" that I can handle since President trump started uttering those two word less than one year ago. If that's your only retort without offering any kind of proof, then you are just as ignorant as the POTUS tweeting that same phrase and he seems to have done that every day for the past week. Fucking morons. And yes, there are at least two "fake news" comments in this story alone.

  22. Divided? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What idiot judge(s) would vote against at least the basic concept of citizens having the right to film police interactions, especially given the plethora of evidence that too many officers "stretch" (AKA: Lie) the truth to make themselves look better. There are definitely cases where the individual in question are committing a crime (even minor ones & even things that shouldn't be a crime) while videoing but in a society even approaching a free and just society standing on a public sidewalk ACROSS from a police station with a running video camera isn't one of them.

  23. As a civilian too your employer would be liable by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Actually the rule is similar for civilian employees. If, in the course of your job duties, you do something wrong and someone sues, it's generally your employer who is liable. The legal term is "respondeat superior", latin for "let the boss respond".

    This is because it's the company who benefits from the work, and therefore should take the risks of work being done imperfectly. The present case applies this same principle to policing - the police department is liable for the actions of their employees.

    If, while working at McDonald's, you intentionally stab someone, you'd personally be responsible because you clearly knew that was wrong. The law on that is "clearly established". Same for the cops.

  24. I specifically said the opposite "wasn't hiding" by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > Turner was not "hiding in the bushes across the street from a police station near Dallas", as you implied.

    Let me quote myself for you, "he wasn't hiding in the bushes." Did you misread "wasn't" and think I said "was"?

    Did you miss "here are two hypothetical examples"?

    > Do you believe that the cops were in the right, arresting a man standing in plain sight

    It's interesting that after that long angry rant, at the end you ask me what I think about it. Perhaps you realized that in no point in the post you angrily replied to did I state my opinion on the matter. I explained the law and the judges' differing opinions. I just read the ruling, I didn't write it.

    Since you seem quite upset about the reasoning I explained, let's be clear about what that was first (the dissenting judge's reasoning, not mine):

    The dissenting judge thinks that given the recent incidents of cops being shot at by snipers in the area, the cops might have *thought* it was okay to go talk to the guy. The dissenting judge (not me, I wasn't involved in this particular case) also thinks that after the guy asked to speak to a supervisor, the cops might have *thought* it was okay to handcuff him for five minutes while waiting for the supervisor to come over.

    We don't know exactly how long he was handcuffed - long enough for the sargeant to come from across the street.

    Here's what I think. I think they shouldn't have handcuffed the guy (and nobody says they should have). I think the cop probably knew better, and his "this is what happens" comment is evidence that he was acting out of anger. So I disagree with the judge who said the cop might have thought it was okay. On the other hand, I don't think it's ridiculous for the judge to *think* that a cop might *think* it was okay. That last sentence is double meta, so it may be unclear. I wonder if I can diagram it:

    I think this:
            - the judge thinks
                      - that the cop *might have*
                                  - mistakenly *thought* it was okay

    Is wrong, but not ridiculous. There are three levels of mushiness there - the judge *thinks* (wrongly) that it is *possible*, not proven but possible, that a cop might *think* that was okay. No, it's not possible, but the judge isn't stupid for thinking that it's possible for a cop to be stupid.

  25. Summary: Cop was mad, not stupid by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Let me summarize what I just said, to perhaps make it more clear:

    The judges had to decide if it was *possible* that the cops might have been stupid.

    I don't think that's possible. I'm sure that the cops were mad, not stupid.

    One judge thinks it's possible that the cops were stupid / poorly trained.

    I'm not mad at the judge - it's not completely ridiculous to think that a cop might be stupid.

  26. actually, contraception, not abortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Griswold v. Connecticut - the government has no business peering into your bedroom
    note well - constitutional rights apply to government actions, your right to privacy, or free press, or whatever, is that the government can't interfere. A private party might invade your privacy, but that's not a constitutional thing..

    But subsequent to Griswold, the idea of privacy has extended virtually everywhere, including actual laws protecting citizens against disclosure of private information collected by the government. "Privacy Act"

    1. Re: actually, contraception, not abortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So that's where he got all that money for those family vacations. Makes sense.

  27. Re:I specifically said the opposite "wasn't hiding by PPH · · Score: 1

    But do you believe that, under these circumstances, it was reasonable to handcuff him,

    Yes. It's called "detained pending an investigation". And since it's a common practice in law enforcement, Turner may be able win a suit against the department, but the individual officers were acting in accordance with standard policies.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  28. That would give government much more power by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > citizens don't have rights that can be violated, government has (limited) powers that can be exercised.

    That would give the government much, much more power the Constitution currently grants. A few examples:

    The government was granted the power to tax.
    - But may not violate citizens right to equal treatment, they can't tax hispanic people four times as high as asian people.

    The government was granted the power to regulate interstate commerce.
    - But may not violate your first amendment rights by prohibiting the sale of conservative magazines across state lines.

    The government was granted the power to build roads.
    - But may not violate your property rights by building a road through your house, unless they buy it from you at fair value.

    The government was granted the power to have courts.
    - But may not force you to testify against yourself.

    I don't think you really want to do away with the fifth amendment (and the rest of the bill of rights), to say that just because the government has the power to operate courts, you know longer have the right against self-incrimination. I don't think you really believe that the power to regulate interstate commerce isn't limited by the right of free speech.

    I think that rather than just saying "oops, I misunderstood", you're grasping to find some other explanation for your words, but you haven't thought through what that would mean.

    --

    Moving to a completely different topic now.
    Suppose you went to a drive-through for breakfast, and you were the first customer when they first opened. They cook put your egg sandwich on the grill and cook it for the designated amount of time. Later, you get sick because the cook didn't realize the grill hadn't yet heated fully, it was only 290 degrees instead of 350. Would you agree the restaurant is liable for making you sick? (This isn't a trick question - a simple yes or no wpuld be fine.)

    Suppose on another day, the cook sees it's you ordering, and he doesn't like you. He blows his nose on your sandwich and you get sick. Should the cook also be liable for his actions, as well as the restaurant?

    Note that in the first instance, the cook made a mistake, an understandable mistake. In the second instance, it wasn't a mistake - everybody knows that blowing your nose somebody's sandwich is not okay.

    Is there a perhaps difference, in terms of the blame put on the cook personally, if he does something that he and everyone else clearly know is wrong?

  29. Bigger picture. Not the actual recording but... by colonel+spalding · · Score: 1

    It's the playback and that certainly goes under free speech that is really what is in question. Its like you over hear the police saying something and they repeat it. E.g. the evidence gathering stage. Also how can this in any way NOT be free speech when a corporation donating millions to pay off a pol is considered speech (and free at that)

    1. Re:Bigger picture. Not the actual recording but... by mi · · Score: 1

      It's the playback and that certainly goes under free speech

      Yes, the playback is/should be protected, no doubt. But the taping itself? As I already asked in this thread — is everything done in order to talk about it in the future protected by the First Amendment?

      Closer to TFA, should this guy have claimed First Amendment protection of his evidence-gathering?

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.