Archive for the 'Assault' Category



You Have Rights, Sure – If It’s On Tape


Pogan-Long incident.


Honrohoe-Vazquez incident.

Is the difference between a cop being reprimanded for illegal actions a good-quality YouTube video? Well, yeah.

The New York Times uses the cases of two bicyclists who were knocked to the ground by members of the NYPD to illustrate the point. In one video, from 2008, Officer Patrick Pogan was just convicted after video emerged of him deliberately putting his shoulder into the path of cyclist Christopher Long, sending him flying. In the other video, from 2007, the actions of Officer Timothy Horohoe aren’t seen but for a split-second before cyclist Richard Vazquez crashes to the ground. Vazquez sued the NYPD and settled for $98,000 and Horohoe did not face any serious charges.

“Pogan, it’s 15 seconds,” [Vazquez’s lawyer Wylie] Stecklow said. “You see that boom; it’s not hard for anybody to look at that for 15 seconds and think they understand what happened. That’s why I think that took off and became viral. The Horohoe case, there’s a lot of nuance you have to understand.”

So, the takeaway lesson we learn from this is that your rights aren’t really ensured unless you or someone else is able to capture it on tape. And capture it well. It pays to travel with a cinematographer.

Article from New York Times (via Gawker)

Man Hits Cameraman On Way Into Court

KFOX cameraman Rudy Reyes was outside the federal courthouse in El Paso to shoot video of a defendant’s family members when one of defendant’s brothers smacked him  in the head as he passed by. The brother in question, the very elegant Paul Barraza, then denied it despite a handful of witnesses. Paul Barraza was later pulled out of the courthouse and arrested for assault.

I bet now he wishes he’d thought twice before doing something that stupid. I mean, really….

See the video here and listen to a KFOX reporter explain the backstory here.

More Tequila Party Nonsense in Arizona

Jaywalking Teens Attack Photographer

It seems photographer Jay York has anointed himself as something like the quality-of-life police in Portland, Oregon. So last Saturday when he saw two teen boys jaywalking across a busy four-lane street, he did what he normally does: he pulled out his iPhone camera to document it so he could send it to city officials. (He does this with graffiti, homeless and the like too.)

The teenagers got upset and tried to grab the camera and an altercation ensued. York called the police, who were able to find the kids in the area and use York’s photo to further ID them. They were arrested and charged with the juvenile equivalent of assault.

On The Portland Press Herald’s site, the comments were pretty evenly divided between those supporting Jay as a much-needed do-gooder and those accusing him of being a tattletale who needs to get a life.

Article from The Portland Press Herald

50 Cent’s Goon Assaults Photographers

Has-been rapper 50 Cent employs bodyguards who like to beat up photographers. As seen in this clip, a bodyguard goes after a couple of photographers waiting outside the rapper’s hotel in Denmark, physically assaulting them — even putting his hands around one’s neck at one point. On an oddly crazed tear, the bodyguard then goes into the photographer’s car and steals his camera. The photographer also claims he deleted his photos.

The bodyguard, whose name has not been released, was later arrested and charged with assault.

Perhaps the bodyguards would be wise to realize paparazzi photos of 50 Cent would only benefit the rapper’s career at this point (if an outlet would even buy them)…. I mean, wow. Talk about misguided anger.

Article from New York Daily News

First Amendment Travesty: Michigan Reporter Sentenced

diane_bukowski_arrested_nov__411
Photo from the Michigan Citizen

It was Michigan Citizen reporter Diane Bukowski’s rotten luck that her sentencing came on the day that GM announced it was filing for bankruptcy. Already this story wouldn’t have gotten much play in Detroit, but now it’s as good as done.

Bukowski was sentenced to 200 hours of community service and ordered to pay a $4,000 fine today for two counts of resisting and obstructing an officer at a crime scene in November. Of course the story is as shady as a big oak tree. It was a police car chase that ended in the death of two men. Bukowski is well known for reporting on police corruption. The officer in question manhandled Bukowski, deleting all of her photos – and the jurors saw the raw Fox 2 news footage that substantiates that she never crossed the police tape. Nevertheless, the cops have friends in high places and now Bukowski will pay.

She is appealing the ruling.

Watch the original Fox 2 news report here.

Article from the Detroit Free Press

I’d Hate to Be This Guy’s Lawyer

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Photo by Jeremy Brooks

This is from an old post on flickr, but still great.

Photographer Jeremy Brooks came upon this angry guy yelling at a homeless man on a corner in San Francisco. He went over to investigate, camera in hand, and the angry man soon turned on him. Mr. Angry Overreaction Man, as Brooks dubbed him, screamed and yelled, threatened him, bumped him with his chest, and told him if the picture ended up on the internet he’d call his lawyer. Brooks stood his ground and got this shot, which fittingly, is now on the internet. 

Brooks says: 

So, Mr. Angry Overreaction Man, your photo is now on the internet. Call your lawyer. Tell him somebody on a public sidewalk took your photo while you were on a public sidewalk. Then tell him you physically assaulted the photographer. See what he says.

Read the whole post on Jeremy Brooks’ flickr page.

Newark Officer: “I can do whatever I want!”

Images from WCBS-TV

A Newark police officer has been suspended after a nasty altercation with a WCBS-TV photographer on Sunday which resulted in the photographer’s arrest. Cameraman Jim Quodomine was filming a peaceful demonstration from a public sidewalk when Special Officer Brian Sharif approached Quodomine, ordered him to stop filming, then lunged at him and grabbed his camera. Sharif then put Quodomine in a choke hold and lead him to a squad car. It’s unclear why Officer Sharif felt filming the march was a problem.

On the footage, a woman’s voice can be heard saying “You can’t arrest him!” To which Officer Sharif responds, “I can do whatever I want!” That is a perfect example of the sort of unchecked egoism of certain police officers that leads to incidents like this.

Understandably, there was public outcry, with Newark Mayor Cory Booker saying he was “very dismayed about what happened.” (Mayor Booker is well known for trying to clean up the corruption and reputation of the troubled city.)

Wait, but here’s the kicker:

The officer, Brian Sharif, has been the source of controversy in the past. Last year, he made news after giving a 75-year-old woman four tickets — including one for careless driving — after she pulled out of a funeral home and accidentally went down a one-way street.

This guy not only needs anger management classes, he needs to not be on the police force.

Article via Newark Star-Ledger

They Do Not Mess Around in Greece

You do not want to get caught taking unauthorized photos in Greece.

Olivier Jobard, an award-winning French photographer working for SIPA Press agency, was arrested and beaten on July 4 for taking photos of a port in the Greek town of Patras. He was working on a story about immigration and didn’t have a permit to photograph the port, which is required by Greek law, although he had been shooting the previous day – and had been stopped twice by guards and allowed to continue.

From the Reporters Without Borders release:

When Jobard was unable to produce a permit, the guard escorted him to a public toilet, pushed him inside, handcuffed him and hit him several times in the face. He then pulled out a knife, cut the strap of Jobard’s camera, threw the camera to the ground and smashed it with his foot.

Reporters Without Borders fully acknowledges Jobard’s need for a permit but condemns the use of violence. Agreed … anyone with half a brain would say it sounds excessive and unnecessary.

Jobard has filed a complaint against the police for assault and battery, meanwhile the Greek media has apparently come out against Jobard, criticizing him while only relaying the “official” (i.e., government) version of the story.

Charges Dropped In Albequerque Case

KOB.com is reporting that charges were dismissed against Rick Foley, an Albequerque NBC news photographer who was arrested  by APD Officer Daniel Guzman after exchanging words at a crime scene. We posted about this story in the beginning of June — viewing the tape of the incident, most would conclude that the officer’s behavior was egregiously aggressive and an inappropriate response.

The Albequerque Journal reported today that Judge Benjamin Chavez said the charge of failure to obey an officer wasn’t viable because the citation didn’t provide sufficient information detailing the crime that took place that night.

Officer Guzman is on paid leave and his disciplinary hearing is scheduled for next week. This incident has prompted Police Chief Ray Schultz to review the way his department handles the media at crime scenes.

Sometimes things are handled correctly, and this is good development for journalists’ rights.

Via KOB.com


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