Posts Tagged 'Philadelphia'

Fan Photographer Axed For Being An Ex-Con

Philadelphia sports fan photographer John Green was fired just before the start of baseball season after his criminal past was discovered through a background check. This is crappy for a few reasons, as Philly.com reports.

Green was upfront about his past during the job interview and his crimes didn’t include sex or children — they were for non-violent burglary offenses, with the last conviction being in 1999. That’s 12 years ago, and since 2007, Green has proven himself to be a popular and successful photographer at Citizens Bank Park, where the Phillies play.

Even though he started with Fan Foto in 2007 as a novice, the very next year Green led the company in sales – meaning fans buying photos he shot – and has been in the top five of the 100-plus photographers used by the company, says manager Coyle.

Isn’t prison supposed to be for rehabilitation? Once you’ve paid your debt, aren’t you released into the world to do something with your life? A blanket rule like not employing convicts is harsh. People would prefer that ex-cons are forever unemployed so that their only option is crime? It just seems foolish.

Source: Philly.com

Bike Cops Arrest Photog at Nightclub Scene


Photo by Jessica Kourkounis/City Paper

Jauhien Sasnou, a freelance photographer in Philadelphia, was arrested last November for taking photos of a melee that took place outside of a nightclub. He was found guilty, fined $148 and ordered to do 24 hours of community service. The Philadelphia City Paper reports this week on Sasnou’s arrest and the ongoing problem photographers face when shooting scenes that involve law enforcement.

Sasnou says that, on the night in question, a group of concertgoers ignored police requests to disperse and shoving and pepper spray ensued. The whole incident took three minutes and three people were arrested – but not before Sasnou took out his camera to document what he describes as excessive force by the police. That’s when an officer noticed him and he was arrested. Sasnou was not informed what his crime was. (The police report says Sasnou “remained on location and began to take pictures” after he was told to leave.)

From the article:

Civil rights lawyers say that Sasnou’s experience isn’t uncommon. Although there doesn’t seem to be any hard data available, anecdotal evidence suggests that citizens who document police activity with cameras are frequently arrested.

In regards to photographing police officers, Pennsylvania apparently has a murky law that revolves around technicalities and the difference between “not prohibited” and “legally allowed.” Nevertheless, the Philadelphia police spokesman said photographing police activity is not something you should be arrested for.

And, finally, the writer makes this point, which is one we’ve long held on this blog:   

It is, perhaps, ironic in an age when, across the country, police cameras capture and ticket red-light-runners, and many traffic stops are videotaped from the dashboard of a squad car. “Well, all of a sudden when the shoe is on the other foot, it’s, ‘Wait, wait, there’s an intrusion of the wiretap act,'” says Paul Hetznecker, a Philadelphia civil rights lawyer.

Article via the City Paper



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