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May 23, 2013
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ACLU Educates Cops on the Public’s Right to FilmPosted on Jul 25, 2012
An ACLU lawsuit against the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C., has paid off in issuance of a set of principles that guide the behavior of officers dealing with people photographing or recording them on the street. In short, it’s legal. The suit was filed on behalf of a young black student named Jerome Vorus, who was detained last year for filming police officers on a Georgetown street. “… What we’re interested in is getting the police to understand how they should behave: When someone’s taking their picture, basically they should just smile,” wrote the ACLU’s Art Spitzer, the attorney who handled the case. —Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly.
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