Infowars.com
January 15, 2014
In a gross attack on the First Amendment, a police officer told Infowars
reporters and crew yesterday that they could not film a wastewater plant from
across a public street.
The officer said that he had the “authority” to stop them from filming even
though he admitted that it was not illegal to film the Hyperion sewage treatment
plant in Los Angeles, California.
“There’s no law, but like I said, based on the fact that it is a critical
site, your activity is being deemed suspicious so we have the authority,” he
said.
This is a perfect example of how police officers routinely use the “color of
law” to deprive journalists of their First Amendment right to publicly film and
cover news stories.
They use their “authority” to intimate reporters even though that authority
runs contrary to basic human rights and the law.
The right to film in public has been affirmed time and time again by the U.S.
Supreme Court and several federal Appeals Courts, which have all ruled that
everyone – not just journalists – has an individual right to film (video, audio,
photography, etc.) in public because there is “no expectation of privacy” in a
public place.
In 2011, the U.S. 1st Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unambiguously that the
First Amendment recognizes this right.
“It is firmly established that the First Amendment’s aegis extends further
than the text’s proscription on laws ‘abridging the freedom of speech, or of the
press,’ and encompasses a range of conduct related to the gathering and
dissemination of information,” Circuit Judge Kermit Lipez wrote in the court’s
opinion.
Additionally, in 2012 the U.S. Supreme Court agreed with a lower court ruling
that a Illinois law which prevented citizens from filming police
was unconstitutional.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
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