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IF YOU SEE SOMETHING - FILM IT 
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Joined: Tue Feb 07, 2012 4:34 am
Posts: 762
Location: Beautiful Bryon Bay
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Post IF YOU SEE SOMETHING - FILM IT
With cameras on street corners, cameras in buildings, cameras on
police car dashboards, and even microphones on police uniforms it
is well understood that recording devices can play a role in
determining just how an event went down.

Yet, scores of individuals have been arrested (under eavesdropping
laws) for trying to protect themselves in this same fashion when
their rights are being violated. Many cops don't like being on
camera and it's not because they're shy.

Recently, an Illinois judge ruled that the state's eavesdropping
law is unconstitutional. This is not the first time such laws have
been ruled against.

You have a right to film, so get your cameras ready...


Illinois judge rules state eavesdropping law unconstitutional

By Muriel Kane
Raw Story

...As explained by the Chicago Tribune’s Megan Crepeau, “The whole thing hinges on the idea that police officers have an expectation of privacy as they perform a public, taxpayer-funded duty. This law, in effect, punishes the public for holding its officials accountable to a public standard. The original intent — to protect private conversations from being recorded — has nothing to do with that.”

The decision came in the case of an artist named Christopher Drew, who was arrested in December 2009 for selling art without a permit. According to Kevin Gosztola at FireDogLake, “Drew, who has a history of challenging the city’s restrictions on the selling of art, was peddling silk-screened patches for $1 in an act of civil disobedience. A First Amendment lawyer and a team of photographers filmed his arrest. The police let the filming go, and Drew was arrested. When it was time for Drew to face his charges, he found out he had been given a Class 1 felony charge for violating the Illinois Eavesdropping Act and filming his arrest. This meant he faced a possible sentence of fifteen years in prison.”

Gosztola notes that Chicago police have traditionally viewed the eavesdropping law as a convenient way to avoid lawsuits for police misconduct. “Police are known to enforce the law themselves,” he comments. “In the final days of January, Occupy Chicago was out protesting in the city when a police officer took a camera from someone who was live streaming the action and deleted the video. He told the live streamer, Keilah, that she could have been charged with a felony.”

Gostola concludes that police may still attempt to arrest protesters under the law but that “any such charges are unlikely to stick.”

TO READ MORE - http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/02/i ... itutional/


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Thu Mar 08, 2012 10:14 am
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Joined: Sun Apr 15, 2012 6:16 pm
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Post Re: IF YOU SEE SOMETHING - FILM IT
Yip, keep your camera's handy! You never know who you might be able to help...

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Thu Mar 08, 2012 10:21 am
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Joined: Tue May 03, 2011 6:06 pm
Posts: 11875
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Post Re: IF YOU SEE SOMETHING - FILM IT
You know there is something wrong when the PTB insist that your activities be transparent, but not theirs.

Reminds me of some forums I have known.....

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Thu Mar 08, 2012 6:15 pm
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