Under arrest for videotaping an arrest

Written by Rob on February 1, 2008 – 10:13 am -

In an era where we are being subjected to more and more unique ways of privacy invasion, traffic cameras, REAL ID cards, data mining, and more,  the age-old question comes up, “Who watches the watchers?”  Apparently, if you know what’s good for you, no one.  A man in Massachusetts is on trial for nothing more than videotaping an arrest by police with cell phone camera.  This is simply shameful, no other way to put it.  The police should be ashamed for arresting this guy, and the D.A. should be ashamed for prosecuting him.  There is ONLY ONE reason to go to all this trouble.  ONE.  The police and D.A. are worried enough about how their actions look on camera that they don’t want ANYONE recording them.  And for that, they should be ashamed of themselves, quite simply.

About the only positive here is that they are prosecuting based on a Massachusetts state law meant to protect citizen’s privacy.  But for public servants charged with special privileges and powers by  our society to claim they are not subject to citizen oversight, is, well, extraordinarily scary. The potential consequences of accepting the contention that oversight is unnecessary are dire.  Politically motivated prosecutions,  prosecutorial overrreach, police harassment and beatings, etc. Not that they’re inevitable, but enough of this is already happening, and telling our public servants they don’t have to worry about consequences of these actions just cannot be good.  Thank god our President would never make such a claim to be above the law! oh wait …


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Posted in Not A Police State |

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