David H. Bebbington
Member
http://seward.newsvine.com/_news/2007/12/20/1177730-police-seize-films-from-amateur-photographer
This guy was making a first attempt at street photography and elected to use a Bessa with 21 mm lens. I can only surmise that the resulting close working distance was felt by his subjects, members of the public, to be threatening. He nonetheless does not appear to have committed a criminal offense, but the police took and acted on a complaint all the same and impounded his film (not as yet returned 6 weeks later).
I seem to recall Les McLean, among others, endorsing a "get in close" approach to street photography - I'm not sure if he still does, as far as I am concerned classic street photography is defunct (public attitude and extreme difficulty in exploiting images commercially without model releases). All the same, the Hull police seem to have behaved particularly stupidly!
This guy was making a first attempt at street photography and elected to use a Bessa with 21 mm lens. I can only surmise that the resulting close working distance was felt by his subjects, members of the public, to be threatening. He nonetheless does not appear to have committed a criminal offense, but the police took and acted on a complaint all the same and impounded his film (not as yet returned 6 weeks later).
I seem to recall Les McLean, among others, endorsing a "get in close" approach to street photography - I'm not sure if he still does, as far as I am concerned classic street photography is defunct (public attitude and extreme difficulty in exploiting images commercially without model releases). All the same, the Hull police seem to have behaved particularly stupidly!