Court Rules That Citizens Can Videotape Police
There’s been a long rash of arrests over recording police officers on duty; recording that floods the internet with footage of police abuse. The First Circuit Court of Appeals made an important decision last week to reaffirm the right to videotape police on duty.
In a similar story, the ACLU recently won a $48,500 settlement of a lawsuit from a man who was arrested in 2009 for videotaping the police arresting his friend. The ACLU brought the case to the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals and the charges against the man were dropped.
Gee, courts, thanks for the permission to use our first amendment rights!
~Health Freedoms
First Circuit Court of Appeals Rules that Citizens Can Videotape Police
The filming of government officials while on duty is protected by the First Amendment, said the Court
The First Circuit Court of Appeals reached a crucial decision last Friday allowing the public to videotape police officers while they’re on the clock.
The decision comes after a string of incidents where individuals have videotaped police officers and were arrested. Police officers across the United States believed citizens didn’t have the right to videotape them as they conducted official duties, but issues like police brutality put the issue up for debate.
One instance where a citizen was arrested for videotaping an officer was when Khaliah Fitchette, a law-abiding teenager from New Jersey, boarded a bus in Newark. Two police officers boarded the bus as well to remove a drunken man. Fitchette began taping the police officers because of how they were handling the man, and a police officer instructed her to stop recording them. When Fitchette refused, she was arrested and placed in the back of a cop car for two hours while the officers took her phone to delete the video. Fitchette was then released, but she and her mother then filed suit against the Newark Police Department with the New Jersey chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
Another example involves Simon Glik, a passerby on the Boston Common. He used his cell phone to tape police officers when the Boston police were punching a man. Citizens surrounding the scene were saying, “You’re hurting him.” Glik never interfered with the police officers’ actions, but recorded the entire incident. The police officers ended up charging Glik with violating a wiretap statute that prohibits secret recording, even though the police officers admitted that they knew Glik was recording them. He was also charged with disturbing the peace and aiding the escape of a prisoner.
While all charges against Glik were dropped due to lack of merit, he still decided to join forces with the ACLU and file a civil rights suit to prevent a similar incident from occurring with others.
On Friday, August 26, 2011, the First Circuit Court of Appeals, which is New England’s highest federal court just below the U.S. Supreme Court, ruled that citizens are allowed to videotape law officials while they conduct official duties.
The city’s attorneys made the argument that police officers should have been exempt from a civil rights lawsuit in the first place in this case because the law is unclear as to whether there’s a “constitutionally protected right to videotape police” conducting their daily duties in public.
“The filming of government officials engaged in their duties in a public place, including police officers performing their responsibilities, fits comfortably within these principles [of protected First Amendment activity].,” said the Court. “Gathering information about government officials in a form that can readily be disseminated to others serves a cardinal First Amendment interest in protecting and promoting the free discussion of governmental affairs.”
The Court added that the police officers should have understood this all along, and that videotaping public officials is not limited to the press.
“Moreover, changes in technology and society have made the lines between private citizen and journalist exceedingly difficult to draw,” the Court continued. “The proliferation of electronic devices with video-recording capability means that many of our images of current events come from bystanders with a ready cell phone or digital camera rather than a traditional film crew, and news stories are now just as likely to be broken by a blogger at her computer as a reporter at a major newspaper. Such developments make clear why the news-gathering protections of the First Amendment cannot turn on professional credentials or status.”
The Court concluded that police officers are to expect to deal with certain “burdens” as citizens practice First Amendment rights, but that there needs to be a healthy balance between police officers being videotaped while acting irresponsibly and the harassment of officers with recording devices while they’re conducting their duties responsibly.
Sources:
http://www.dailytech.com/First+Circuit+Court+of+Appeals+Rules+that+Citizens+Can+Videotape+Police/article22587.htm
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11250/1172776-100.stm
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This is a very good thing. I as a advocacy vidographer for the homeless in Tucson, AZ have been concerned about what would happen if I taped a policeman doing something he shouldn’t. My mind has been set at ease since this judgement.
This is of the utmost of importance for the American people. As this nation has been the victim of a loss of civil rights.
It is time that our courts, recognize that the civil rights of the people of this country were what made democracy which this country claims to be in assistance with worldwide.
If this country cannot demonstrate democracy, then I’m afraid that the resistance to democracy in other countries is well understood.
I can only state that when this country also learns that a two party system by preselected individuals is not a democracy this country can surely turn around.
The United States is actually a republic, not a democracy. A democracy is a form of government in which the people decide policy matters directly–through town hall meetings or by voting on ballot initiatives and referendums, while a republic is a system in which the people choose representatives who make policy decisions on their behalf.
The system of government established by the Constitution was never intended to be a democracy; as evidenced not only in the wording of the Pledge of Allegiance (“…and to the republic, for which it stands…”) but in the Constitution itself, which declares that “The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government” (Article IV, Section 4.) The form of representation, and the methods for selecting representatives established by the Constitution were deliberately created with the intent to produce a republic, not a democracy.
I guess even the “Founding Fathers” didn’t have any more regard for the citizens of the United States than the politicians of today.
yes,we do have a two party government: Big money and everyone else. If you got the money you can play the game, if not, you pay for the game.as far as france’s post, the founding fathers probably didn’t consider how morally and ethically confused our leaders would get.
dumb cops are making people rich.