Man Faces 7
Year Sentence Under "Wiretapping Law" For Filming Police
OK for police and
government to film and wiretap US citizens though
Prisonplanet | June 12, 2007
By Steve Watson
A man has been
charged in Carlisle, Pennsylvania with filming police officers
during a routine traffic stop and faces up to seven years in prison
for "wiretapping".
Brian D.
Kelly is charged under a state law that bars the intentional
interception or recording of anyone's oral conversation without
their consent,
reports the Patriot News
.
The criminal case
relates to the sound, not the pictures, that his camera picked up.
His camera and film
were seized by police during the May 24 stop, he said, and he spent
26 hours in Cumberland County Prison until his mother posted her
house as security for his $2,500 bail. Police also took film from
his pockets that wasn't related to the traffic stop, he said.
Kelly, just 18
years old, is obviously extremely scared and has apologized
profusely for not knowing the law. he has sought the help of the
ACLU in the case.
The charge however
is bogus because the law is not adhered to by police officers
themselves. An exception to the wiretapping law allows police to
film people during traffic stops.
In addition police
routinely carry microphones that are wired up to their vehicles to
record conversations without the knowledge of anyone whom they stop
or question.
This is not the
first time this has happened either. Last year a North Middleton
Twp. man was charged in a street racing case that involved a
wiretapping charge. Police claimed the man ordered associates to
tape police breaking up an illegal race after officers told him to
turn off their cameras.
Furthermore,
just last month
a 48-year-old man from Dover, New Hampshire
was arrested for "wiretapping" for allegedly recording police while
they were investigating him for driving while intoxicated.
In addition
we have previously covered stories where
camera crews have been threatened
with arrest for filming peaceful
demonstrations, and where cops have been caught
stealing protestor's cameras
.
Filming in public
is a right every American citizen has under the first amendment,
which is why the cops in the case above had to steal the camera and
the footage, because there was no legal basis to seize it.
It seems that
filming and photographing is now deemed to be a threat per se. Pick
from any number of stories archived at
www.freedomtophotograph.com for
example.
In Seattle, police
banned a photography student from a public park. He was taking
photographs of a bridge for a homework assignment. The officers who
ban him from the park do so without the knowledge of park officials
and have no authority to do so.
In Texas a man was
first threatened by neighbors and then reportedly accosted and
sprayed with pepper spray by police. He was walking around his
neighborhood, filming with his new video camera.
In New York,
National Press Photographers Association members staged a protest in
the New York subway system to bring attention to a proposed law to
ban photography in the subway system.
In Philadelphia a
magazine photographer was detained and questioned after a parade for
taking architectural shots while waiting for a subway train.
In Harrisburg, PA a
man was swarmed by 8 Police and accused of being a member of
Al-Qaeda after shooting pictures of his new car under a bridge.
We have
recently exposed how some police now do not understand that they are
violating the rights of individuals
. In other cases we have witnessed police
pull out pocket constitutions from cars and question their legality.
In addition we have
a government which has been mired in scandal for wiretapping US
citizens without warrant, yet when the tables are turned US citizens
face the full wrath of the corrupt judicial system.
Though clearly
Brian D. Kelly had no criminal intent and is likely to escape with
just a fine, the case sets a dangerous precedent. US citizens can be
arrested and charged for filming on public streets.
It also sets the
precedent that those who enforce the law are also above the law.
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