Archive for the 'Photojournalism' Category



Two Misdemeanor Charges for Student Photog

Photo by Shawn Nee / discarted (Used to show that photographs of patients and ambulances are not illegal)

Justin Kenward, photo editor of the Chaffey College student newspaper, The Breeze, is facing criminal charges (that will likely be dropped by a level-headed judge on October 18), after photographing a car accident victim near the school’s newsroom.

According to the Student Press Law Center, Kenward began photographing the victim as he was being loaded into the ambulance on a stretcher by emergency personel. Kenward claims that the victim did not have an issue with being photographed, and that the man (who was talking on his cell phone at the time) even smiled and waved at him. But fire personnel attending to the patient are saying the opposite, claiming that the man objected to being photographed and that Kenward was interfering with them.

“Firefighter medics reported that while they were attending to a person experiencing chest pain, a photographer began taking photographs of the patient despite the patient’s objections, and allegedly interfered with the care of the patient,” according to a press release from Chaffey College.

According to SPLC’s report, a paramedic then told Kenward he was not allowed to photograph the patient due to doctor-patient confidentially. So Kenward obliged and moved back.

Minutes later, campus cadets arrived on scene, and like fire personnel, told the photo editor that he could not photograph the incident. However, Kenward identified himself as press, which caused the cadets to walk away.

“I took that as a green light and continued shooting,” Kenward said.

However, at that point, another firefighter again told Kenward he could not take pictures.

He was about twenty feet away when a firefighter said no pictures were allowed. Kenward argued with the man, took down his name and went inside.

Putting morals aside (which is simply one man’s opinion versus another man’s opinion), photographing a victim inside of an ambulance, which still has its doors open, is not against the law, nor does it violate doctor-patient confidentially. And how can someone even argue that this does violate doctor-patient confidentiality when a doctor isn’t even present? Is it maybe because this paramedic was inventing a non-existent law based on their own morals, rather than following actual law? Possibly.

But if the paramedics’ claims are true, and the victim did object to being photographed, it doesn’t matter because the accident occurred in public where an expectation of privacy does not exist. Which means, anybody (including accident victims) can be photographed despite their objections. So it appears these paramedics, firefighters, and campus cadets need training regarding photographers’ rights and the First Amendment.

Seriously though, when are firefighters and police officers going to realize that they are not victim watchdogs in charge of censoring anybody trying to document an incident scene that involves injured people? That is not their job. Nor is it their job to threaten college reporters with expulsion if they do not kowtow to their unlawful demands, such as what one officer tried to get Kenward to do.

Shortly after, an emergency team member came in with a police officer. Kenward, the newspaper adviser and a Breeze reporter spent about an hour discussing the matter with the police. The officer wanted the images but the group refused. Kenward said the officer threatened to expel him from campus for two weeks if he did not hand over a copy of images.

Thankfully, the officer’s threats had no effect on Kenward who held strong to his position and did not hand over the photos.

“I knew he wasn’t able to actually expel me, that’s up to the school board,” Kenward said.

More important, law enforcement does not have the legal authority to demand the images either. Especially in California, which has very strict shield laws that protect journalists from the prying eyes and hands of cops. Greg Leslie, an attorney for Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press explains:

“You cannot seize the work product — including notes and photographs — even if you have a search warrant,” Leslie said. “The proper route would be for them to subpoena the photos.”

Greg continues, bolstering the fact that law enforcement or firefighters can not prevent photographers (or anybody as a matter of fact) from documenting accident or crime scenes, including when victims are inside ambulances:

“You can always take pictures at a crime scene, but you can’t interfere,” Leslie said. “Even taking pictures inside an ambulance is not necessarily illegal.”

But despite all of that, the unknown officer did not relent and eventually returned hours later, charging Kenward with “interfering with a firefighter and disobeying an order from a firefighter.” Which, as we all know, are your standard “contempt of cop” charges that all cops use when somebody hasn’t violated any laws but stood up for their rights and didn’t acquiesce to their imperious tactics and empty threats.

“I wanted to scream,” Kenward said.

So do we.

Article via SPLC

Untitled

Photo by LJ

Grab Your Cameras – Events Roundup

Photo by Shawn Nee / discarted

Lots of events happening throughout the country this weekend. So get off Hulu, grab your cameras, and hit the streets for all of the possible mayhem. And if you have a tip on an event happening in your area let us know, so we can add it to the list.

The Committee to Stop FBI Repression is holding National Days of Action over the coming week:

Friday, 10/1: Dallas, TX – 7:00 pm, the Grassy Knoll, near 400 block of Elm

Saturday 10/2: Miami, FL – Saturday at 12 noon, FBI Miami Field Office, 16320 NW 2nd Avenue North Miami Beach, FL 33169.

Tuesday 10/5: Milwaukee, WI – 5:30pm, Federal Building on 3rd and Wisconsin Ave, organized by Milwaukee Activist Defense Network

Tuesday 10/5: Olympia, WA – 4pm, 711 Capitol Way at Evergreen Plaza Building

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The progressive networking organization One Nation is holding events in Los Angeles and Washington, DC, this weekend:

Saturday 10/2: Los Angeles, CA – 9am, Los Angeles City College, 855 Vermont ave

Saturday 10/2: Washington, DC – 11am, Lincoln Memorial/National Mall

One Nation also has a great local events page where you can type in your zip code to see what’s happening in your neighborhood.

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Boycott Arizona Diamondbacks in LA! is holding an event at Dodger Stadium on Sunday:

Sunday 10/3: Los Angeles, CA – 12pm, Dodgers Stadium (meet at “THIS IS MY TOWN” billboard), Sunset Blvd./Elysian Park Ave.

There’s also a Boycott Arizona – Los Angeles Committee Facebook page.

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The Tea Party Patriots are holding all kinds of patriotic get-togethers this weekend so if you feel like donning a long-sleeved, button-up American flag shirt, check out their events page.

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A group of Manassas, VA, residents will gather Saturday to protest the opening of an adult novelty store called KK’s Temptations, which will also coincide with the town’s Fall Jubilee. While you’re there, maybe you’ll see Kevin Bacon pulled over in his yellow Volkswagen Beetle and being ticketed for playing music.

Saturday 10/2: Manassas, VA – 12pm, Manassas City Hall

The Invisible Nest: Life in Chernobyl

I had a different idea about what Chernobyl was before going there. When the nuclear reactor exploded on 26 April 1986, Chernobyl, as a city, has been redefined as “the worst nuclear disaster in history.” With disasters, there are terrrifying facts, figures and opinions. How much radiation was released, the countries it affected, politics, the people evacuated, long term health effects and death.

But going there, there are things which simply cannot be measured.

Life goes on in Chernobyl. It’s been damaged, but it’s home for those who have stayed, and those who have returned. – Jean Paolo Ty

Quartier gitan – Perpignan

Photo by Ivan Constantin

An Interview with Tom Stoddart

He doesn’t seem to get the same attention that many other accomplished photographers receive, but Tom Stoddart is certainly one of photojournalism’s greatest talents. And with less than 800 views (at the time of this posting), this modestly shot interview with Tom is worth any aspiring photojournalist’s time.

To see more of Stoddart’s work check out his website.

New York City, 1972

Photo by richardgreene.com ©2010

Duane Kerzic Suing Homeland Security

You might remember Duane Kerzic as the photographer who was detained and cited for trespassing in 2008 by Amtrak police for taking pictures inside New York’s Penn Station while participating in Amtrak’s annual photo contest, “Picture Our Train.” Kerzic was later vindicated by an undisclosed financial settlement and an appearance on “The Colbert Report,” and now he’s a plaintiff in a federal lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s laptop search policy at the border.

According to NPPA:

In July 2007, Kerzic was returning to the United States from a trip to Canada where he’d been photographing lighthouses and national parks for a story. He was riding his motorcycle and his laptop and camera gear were in his saddlebag when he arrived at the Customs and Border Protection inspection point at the Thousand Island border crossing. When agents asked him where he was going and then referred him to secondary screening, he was asked to wait inside a building while his motorcycle and saddlebag remained outside. Kerzic could see CBP agents going through his belongings outside, and in a few minutes a CBP agent came into the building with Kerzic’s laptop in his hands.

After looking through the photographer’s laptop for about 15 minutes, Kerzic was permitted to leave and to enter the United States.

The policy authorizes US Customs and Border Protection agents to conduct suspicionless searches on U.S. citizens’ electronic devices at international borders and then copy and distribute the devices’ contents (even after the individual is permitted entry into the United States). And that, needless to say, is deeply concerning to journalists who rely heavily on protecting their sources from disclosure and possible retribution to do their jobs.

As a First Amendment concern NPPA’s lawyer, Mickey H. Osterreicher, believes that “government officials’ unfettered ability to search journalists’ laptops and other electronic devices will have a chilling effect on their ability to gather and disseminate the news once it becomes widely known that any information they gather may be subject to search and seizure without probable cause or reasonable suspicion.”

“This will directly impact their ability to provide confidentiality to their sources,” Osterreicher said. “One can only imagine the added difficulty, if not impossibility, for journalists to conduct interviews, report on foreign relations or cover stories involving allegations of corruption when news sources believe that the information gathered abroad may be reviewed, copied and shared by agencies of the government without any of the normally guaranteed Constitutional protections.”

More important, these DHS policies not only impact journalists, but all Americans.

“Allowing government officials to look through American’s most personal materials – the things we store in our laptops, cameras, and cell phones – without reasonable suspicion is unconstitutional and inconsistent with American values, and a waste of limited resources. It doesn’t make us ‘safer’. Instead it ‘builds a bigger haystack’ and diverts resources away from proven law enforcement methods.”

The lawsuit, which was filed on behalf  of the National Press Photographers Association, the American Civil Liberties Union, New York Civil Liberties Union, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, graduate student Pascal Abidor, and Duane Kerzic as plaintiffs against Janet Napolitano, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security head, argues that Americans do not relinquish their constitutional rights when they decide to travel outside the United States, i.e., protection from unreasonable searches and seizures that are protected by the Fourth Amendment.

Source: NPPA Joins Federal Lawsuit Challenging Constitutionality of DHS Laptop Search

rOsa

Photo by Devin Yalkin

Jessica

Photo by Shawn Nee / discarted


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