As usual your post is informative, knowledgable, and reasoned. Good info and food for thought.
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You're on a board where people are pushing for their rights under the Bill of Rights, pushing that bad police officers be held responsible, and think I'm anticop?A-R wrote:
As for CedarParkDad, you've made your opinion clear. I don't care to continue discussing it with someone as narrow minded and obviously anti-cop as you.
Well, somehow we went from a discussion of the public filming a LEO to a discussion on LEO body cameras. But I always have an issue with this wording "obey lawful orders". What is a "lawful" order? Do I need a lawyer next to me to tell if an order is or isn't "lawful". Our laws are encyclopedic. I'm all for giving the LEOs room to work. But I've seen video of LEOs threatening to arrest people who are standing in their own front yard and WELL out of the way as far as creating interference. Is an "order" to leave your own yard and go inside your home "lawful"? When you're filming 20 - 25 feet away?ELB wrote:
ETA: I took a quick peek at HB1035 -- it basically says it is a defense to prosecution for Interference with Public Duties if recording/photographing/documenting/observing was what you were doing (as long as you obey lawful orders to change position or proximity).
1. Resistance to being recorded ... the vast majority of cops are already recorded on dash cams (some also on body cams, or just audio microphones). The resistance to others recording is not the recording but the proximity (more on that next). But the next part of your narrative - that any cop "resistant to recording" will be used to reinforce the narrative that every cop is evil is PRECISELY the trouble I have with this rampant wide-spread call to mandate even more police recording options (body cams) ... IF a cop is involved in a critical incident and for ANY reason the incident is not recorded (forgot to activate camera in heat of the moment, technical malfunction, bad camera angle/didn't actually record anything, camera damaged during the incident) then an ever growing portion of the populace will simply ASSUME the cop(s) are guilty and covering up their guilt. Cameras have a place, but they are not the ONLY measure of truth.XinTX wrote:Well, somehow we went from a discussion of the public filming a LEO to a discussion on LEO body cameras. But I always have an issue with this wording "obey lawful orders". What is a "lawful" order? Do I need a lawyer next to me to tell if an order is or isn't "lawful". Our laws are encyclopedic. I'm all for giving the LEOs room to work. But I've seen video of LEOs threatening to arrest people who are standing in their own front yard and WELL out of the way as far as creating interference. Is an "order" to leave your own yard and go inside your home "lawful"? When you're filming 20 - 25 feet away?ELB wrote:
ETA: I took a quick peek at HB1035 -- it basically says it is a defense to prosecution for Interference with Public Duties if recording/photographing/documenting/observing was what you were doing (as long as you obey lawful orders to change position or proximity).
Don't get me wrong, I'm not "anti cop". But nowadays there is a concerted effort by the media to highlight EVERY case of bad police work. Resistance to being recorded will be used to reinforce the narrative that every cop is evil and they just want to use minorities for target practice. I know that's not true, but it's the narrative being pushed by today's yellow journalism. And resistance to being recorded gives the APPEARANCE there is something to hide. Is it right? No. But that's the narrative being pushed. In the long run it will be shown to be the twisting of the truth that it is. But that will take some time. It will continue until the media finds another bad guy they want to demonize.
Personally, I'd never assume that a technical failure is the fault of the officer. I would consider that, with a camera that can be selectively activated, that an officer might have intentionally chosen NOT to activate the camera. It's a simple solution, really. Out of the car or lights on, then the body camera is active. It's not a technological marvel. Plus, it's a "workload" issue. I don't want LEOs to even have to think about it - I don't want to give them any distractions. Cameras should be fully automatic, non-distracting, and such would make it hard to fault the officer.A-R wrote: IF a cop is involved in a critical incident and for ANY reason the incident is not recorded (forgot to activate camera in heat of the moment, technical malfunction, bad camera angle/didn't actually record anything, camera damaged during the incident) then an ever growing portion of the populace will simply ASSUME the cop(s) are guilty and covering up their guilt. Cameras have a place, but they are not the ONLY measure of truth.
I agree with you here, which is why any "minimum distance" law needs to not set an arrestable distance, but should set a safe distance outside of which you know that you're not breaking the law. Inside of that distance, LEOs get to use situational awareness and tactical digression to determine if he/she is distracted or threatened.A-R wrote: What distance is adequate depends on the “totality of the circumstances” (another concept that should’ve been taught in CHL class). You mentioned 20-25 feet? Ever heard of the “Tueller Drill” (another concept that should’ve been covered in CHL class)? It’s a training concept that states you must be able to draw, present, and fire your weapon at a target facing you in less than the 2-3 seconds it takes an average adult male to run 21 feet from a standing position and harm you with a bladed or blunt weapon. With that in mind, how can 20-25 feet be an adequate distance to stand away from an officer who is dealing with subject(s) on a scene and has his back to you while you’re filming? Suffice to say if an officer on scene tells you to “back up” or “stand over there” then you better do so or risk the Interference with Public Duties charge. If you don’t like it or think the officer is pushing you too far back, then pursue that grievance later. Just like the side of the road is not time to argue a traffic ticket, on the scene of an active police investigation is no time to argue how far back you need to stand.
And if you refuse to move?MechAg94 wrote:The problem is that even if you set a "safe distance" of 25 or 30 feet, someone recording might still be standing on evidence in a crime scene or worse, inadvertently kicking it around. I would say the cop shouldn't arrest you, but they should have the authority to demand you move further away or point out a boundary.
I agree. While I think departments should issue body armor, it isn't so expensive that an officer couldn't purchase his own.Cedar Park Dad wrote:I'd rather spend the money on body cameras.A-R wrote:THIS
There are still officers in small departments who are not issued BODY ARMOR! Let's fix that problem before we start throwing money at body cameras.
I'd be ok with making that a state expenditure though.
VMI77 wrote:I agree. While I think departments should issue body armor, it isn't so expensive that an officer couldn't purchase his own.Cedar Park Dad wrote:I'd rather spend the money on body cameras.A-R wrote:THIS
There are still officers in small departments who are not issued BODY ARMOR! Let's fix that problem before we start throwing money at body cameras.
I'd be ok with making that a state expenditure though.
Your posts reveal quite a bit as well.A-R wrote:VMI77 wrote:I agree. While I think departments should issue body armor, it isn't so expensive that an officer couldn't purchase his own.Cedar Park Dad wrote:I'd rather spend the money on body cameras.A-R wrote:THIS
There are still officers in small departments who are not issued BODY ARMOR! Let's fix that problem before we start throwing money at body cameras.
I'd be ok with making that a state expenditure though.
CedarParkDad, I rest my case on your posts revealing an anti-cop tendency.
Note there was another officer there who gave a false report, including that the two of them had immediately called, and given the guy CPR. Instead they stood around chatting.Slager even dropped his taser near Walter Scott's body to substantiate his would-be testimony.
Another post revealing an anti-citizen tendency.A-R wrote:VMI77 wrote:I agree. While I think departments should issue body armor, it isn't so expensive that an officer couldn't purchase his own.Cedar Park Dad wrote:I'd rather spend the money on body cameras.A-R wrote:THIS
There are still officers in small departments who are not issued BODY ARMOR! Let's fix that problem before we start throwing money at body cameras.
I'd be ok with making that a state expenditure though.
CedarParkDad, I rest my case on your posts revealing an anti-cop tendency.
You mean like the 4th Amendment and 5th Amendment under the Constitution? Like the right to not be killed and then have the police make a story up, complete with other police covering for him? Thats scary, just scary in the USA.A-R wrote:Whether or not cops are recorded is not the issue that reveals your anti-cop bias (most already are - dash cams). The issue I have with BOTH of your written assertions is that you both place a higher value on police oversight (body cams) than police safety (body armor). I find that open admission from both of you staggering and very telling of the value you place on your socio-political ideals and voyeristic "gotcha" wants
And he wasn't fired, nor charged until the video came out with what actually happened.A-R wrote: PS: and for the record, state police were investigating the Slager-Scot case before the cell phone video was released. See there are other investigative tactics (evidence, ballistics etc) used by real police who better understand such things than keyboard warriors who speculate, pontificate, and claim only video can prove the truth. But again, feel free to spout off about how you know he woulda gotten away with it if not for the video, which doesn't even reveal the full story. That said, Slager screwed up huge, deserves to and will be punished severely.
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