
Shepard Fairey Mural, Downtown Cincinnati Photo by chrisglass
Archive for the 'Photographers’ Rights' Category
Are We Betraying the Planet?
Published June 25, 2010 Photographers' Rights Leave a CommentTags: chrisglass, Shepard Fairey
Free Lens Cloth: Rights at the Ready
Published June 24, 2010 Photographers' Rights Leave a CommentTags: amateur photography, lens cloth, magazine, uk
Feeling harassed, harangued, misunderstood? Having trouble remembering your rights? The UK magazine Amateur Photography is giving away this handy printed lens cloth with the July 6th issue.
Article from Amateur Photography (via Boing Boing)
BP Doesn’t Want You to Film Them, OK?
Published June 23, 2010 Photographers' Rights , Police Harassment 5 CommentsTags: BP, drew wheelan, intimidation, Louisiana, oil spill
What more is there to say? The oil spill is a disaster and BP are jerks.
Watch the above video as Drew Wheelan, conservationist coordinator for the American Birding Association, tries to film BP’s offices in Houma, Louisiana — from across the street.
Wheelan: “Am I violating any laws or anything like that?”
Officer: “Um…not particularly. BP doesn’t want people filming.”
Wheelan: “Well, I’m not on their property so BP doesn’t have anything to say about what I do right now.”
Officer: “Let me explain: BP doesn’t want any filming. So all I can really do is strongly suggest that you not film anything right now. If that makes any sense.”
Article from Mother Jones (via Thomas Hawk)
G-20 Kicks Off With A Photographer Detained
Published June 23, 2010 Photographers' Rights , Police Harassment 2 CommentsTags: G-20 Summit, photographer detained, Toronto, Zach Bussey

G-20 security fence. Photo by Zach Bussey
The G-20 Summit Meeting will be held June 26-27 in Toronto, and security will no doubt be tight as 20 countries gather to talk about issues related to the global economy.
CBC.com “citizen blogger” Zach Bussey, who works as part of a street team covering the event, found this out firsthand Monday when he took a little tour around the large cordoned-off area and snapped a few photos of fences and police officers. He was, of course, stopped, questioned and detained.
I told them that I was there because it’s not every day your city is turned into a war zone and it was interesting.
And then, after detaining Bussey for 30 minutes or so, they let him go without explanation.
What? Really? No waterboarding for me? Great! But wait… why was I detained anyway? Why wasn’t I informed of what I was being held for? Immediately I recounted my story in 140 characters on Twitter, I felt violated. The lack of communication had me in a frenzy of frustration.
Bussey questioned himself, his outfit, his actions and couldn’t figure out what triggered the police’s suspicions. I can tell him, though — it’s the CAMERA.
I’ve come to accept and am okay with what happened today. I understand tension is high and they’ve got to keep their eyes open for security threats. Maybe they had first-day jitters too? I think all of us can accept that mistakes can be made. But there has to be better handling if this is going to be a common occurrence this week. Police need to communicate better with who they are questioning.
No one is going to accept a temporary suspension of our rights because world leaders are in town. So please Integrated Security Unit, do it right. This is Canada — the best country in the world. I think I deserved better.
We all do, Zach.
Article from G20 Street Level/CBC.com
Judge Rules In Favor of Photog
Published June 22, 2010 Photographers' Rights , Photojournalism , Protests Leave a CommentTags: David Morse, first amendment, First Amendment Project, freedom of the press, UC Berkeley, University of California, unlawful seizure
Hey, guess what? It turns out the police are not allowed to seize a photojournalist’s camera, which we all knew but, still, sometimes these things have to go to a higher court so we can double-check. On Friday, a judge ruled that a search warrant used to review David Morse’s photos from a December 2009 UC Berkeley protest was invalid.
While covering the protest for IndyBay, Morse was arrested, along with seven others, and charged with assaulting a police officer and vandalism among other things. A few days later, all the charges were dropped and Morse’s camera was returned, but his storage devices never were. The university was also ordered to return all of Morse’s photos on Friday.
From the San Francisco Chronicle:
Morse was covering the demonstration outside Chancellor Robert Birgeneau’s campus residence for the San Francisco Bay Area Independent Media Center, also known as Indybay. Morse repeatedly identified himself as a journalist before he was arrested by campus police, which obtained a search warrant to look at his photos before he was released on bail, according to the First Amendment Project.
Score one for the constitution (and the First Amendment Project).
Article from San Francisco Chronicle and IndyBay
Reporter Attacked at Neighborhood Meeting
Published June 21, 2010 Assault , Photographers' Rights , Photojournalism Leave a CommentTags: bat f*%#ing crazy, community meeting, George Edwards, Improvement Association, La Habra Heights
What was so important at the “members only” La Habra Heights Improvement Association meeting that the members had to get into a physical altercation with a photojournalist? La Habra resident and independent reporter George Edwards was filming the yearly meeting when LHH member John Pearce lost it and attacked him from behind, trying to take his camera away.
After a group surrounded Edwards and repeatedly asked him to leave, saying it was a private meeting, another member, identified as Jeffrey Heintz, manhandles Edwards while claiming Edwards’ “was attacking members of the Improvement Association” with his filming. As Edwards tries to defend himself, a woman named Karen Vipperman says, “No, you were not attacked, your camera was touched.” (Note to Karen: Look up what assault means.)
Now, clearly there’s history and bad blood among Edwards and these people, and that’s totally immaterial. Because you take that out of the equation, and these LHH people are bat f*%#ing crazy. Just ugly, ugly behavior from adults who are supposed to be representing their community. Meanwhile they don’t even realize another person is filming the whole thing.
Edwards filed a report with the LA sheriff’s office, which is investigating the incident.
Article from lahabraheights.net (TOTH to J.Alcorn)
Photographer Kicked Out of Blackhawks Party
Published June 21, 2010 Photographers' Rights Leave a CommentTags: Bob Chwedyk, Chicago Blackhawks, craig johnson, Daily Herald, Elk Grove, Stanley Cup
The Chicago Blackhawks’ Stanley Cup made a stop at the Village Hall in the team president’s home of Elk Grove, Il., on Saturday, but, as it turns out, the party wasn’t for everyone to enjoy — just a select few, like the area mayors and town officials. Even though the Blackhawks invited the local newspaper the Daily Herald to document the event, photographer Bob Chwedyk was abruptly asked to leave by a police officer. He was told it was a private party.
Despite Illinois politics usually being a paragon of ethics and integrity, something smells fishy in Elk Grove. I mean, we all know how the Stanley Cup needs its privacy, but then maybe you shouldn’t throw the event in a public space funded by taxpayer dollars. Might it have something to do with Elk Grove Mayor Craig Johnson’s son being cited for a hit and run the day before? Who knows? But it’s really tacky.
Article from Daily Herald (where you can see video too)
App Allows Cops to ID Criminals Instantly
Published June 20, 2010 Photographers' Rights 3 CommentsTags: app, biometrics, Brockton, criminals, fourth amendment, iphone, Massachusetts, MORIS, Police
Police in Brockton, Mass., will be the first in the country to have a powerful technological tool at their disposal — an iPhone app that allows them to snap photos of suspects and immediately learn who they are and their criminal history. It’s all part of a facial recognition system, known as MORIS, that uses biometrics to check the photo against a database of existing criminals in mere seconds.
While the novelty of technology is always exciting, I would think some serious thought is going to have to be given to when and how this app is used. Brockton Police Chief William Conlon says, “We are not going to just randomly stop people. It will be used when someone has done something.” But some major civil liberties concerns are raised here, and there is no doubt people will question the constitutionality of such an intrusive device in the context of the Fourth Amendment.
Article from Patriot Ledger (via Switched)
Lady Gaga Gets Grumpy Over Photo
Published June 19, 2010 Photographers' Rights 1 CommentTags: camera, fan photo, lady gaga
Performance artist/pop singer Lady Gaga is getting quite the reputation as a diva lately. Page Six reports that when LG saw a fellow diner taking a photo of her in a New York restaurant last weekend, she confronted him and demanded he not only stop but delete the photo, which he did. (The headline read “Lady Gaga Demands Privacy in Public.)
Because we all know Lady Gaga doesn’t like attention.
(And don’t delete photos, people. Those requests are lame bullying tactics that are totally unenforceable.)
Article from New York Post

