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Satinsnow said:It is funny, even before 9/11 the only place I was ever able to photograph without being hasseled was either Yellowstone or when I lived in Hawaii, I remember when I first moved to Montana about '97 and I set my 4x5 up outside our Library, which is also the builiding that the oldest School house in the area and wanted to take some shots, nice climbing plants on the build with increadable ambiance, and I was questioned by the local cops, took one shot and moved on, then went to the home of the founder of the city to take shots, and same thing...this was before homeland security or any other thing they like to say they are protecting now a days, it was really bizzare and I almost got thrown in Jail, cause I guess after the second time of being hassled, I got a bit smug with the cops and asked them if they thought I was James Bond and had a miniture nuke in the camera! LOL
So, this is not something new since 9/11, it has been happening for a while now..
Dave
Eric Rose said:Hey what's new. Back in the 60's I was hassled constantly by cops for just having long hair.
It doesn't matter how much you "needle" the cops--it may be stupid, but unless it's illegal, they're still in the wrong, period.Alex Hawley said:Given the facts that she got fired, and had several previous encounters with Law Enforcement, and seems to be "marked" by them, could it be that she has been needling them in some fashion, trying to provoke an incident?
It has plenty to do with photography and its becoming more frequent with people getting arrested or harassed by the police over taking photographs. The irony being just about everyone has a camera phone.Peter Williams said:Isn't this better suited to the soap box? This doesn't seem to have a lot to do with photography.
Alex Hawley said:There may be a bozo cop involved; no shortage of them anywhere. The charges were tossed; didn't even make it to the Desk Sergeant. So what?
Roger Krueger said:Police wasting their time enforcing laws that don't exist, and eroding their already limited credibility, makes us less secure, not more.
Alex Hawley said:I think you're only seeing the side of the story you want to see.
1. There may be a bozo cop involved; no shortage of them anywhere. The charges were tossed; didn't even make it to the Desk Sergeant. So what? Move on. If she wants to sue them, then fine, that's also her right. Go for it, but don't expect public reimbursement of her legal fees unless the court determines they are warranted.
2. But when someone gets fired, that tells me her boss was fed up with her for one reason or another.
1. Well, untill it happens to others, why should I care...
In 1930es in Germany you know what started same way. NO, I don't saying it is same as wrongly arresting one individual, but same thinking: "Untill it doesn't happens to me it is not my problem" made one of foundations for raise of worst human behaviour in history of human kind. There is one old saying which tells something like "For evil to win it is enough that good people do nothing"
2. Exactly!
Maybe she didn't want to have sex with her boss, so boss (he or she) made a way for revenge without fear of being sued for sexual harassment...
nexus said:It has plenty to do with photography and its becoming more frequent with people getting arrested or harassed by the police over taking photographs. The irony being just about everyone has a camera phone.
Roger Krueger said:It doesn't matter how much you "needle" the cops--it may be stupid, but unless it's illegal, they're still in the wrong, period.
Alex Hawley said:But how "right" is it to take advantage of the legality, provoking incidents just because the provoker will always be in the "right".
Eric Rose said:Hey what's new. Back in the 60's I was hassled constantly by cops for just having long hair.
BradS said:I still do and still am.
Eric Rose said:Hey what's new. Back in the 60's I was hassled constantly by cops for just having long hair.
mark said:This is so illogical that I swore you meant it as a joke.
If something is legal, how can doing it provoke any incident at all.
joeyk49 said:In times of great crisis, we must sometimes tighten our personal liberties for the greater security of our nation. In the past we have seen it in the form of rationing of resources to curfews, etc. When the crisis subsides, the restrictions loosen. The constitution has proven, time and again, a dynamic instrument by which we govern ourselves. This case will resolve itself, where it should, in the courts. I just wish that more people (in this case photographer and cop) would consider their course, before committing to it.
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