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You are here: Home / A Neat New Reason To Go To Jail

A Neat New Reason To Go To Jail

August 15, 2011 by

I'm sorry Bob, you have no aesthetic value, so you're going to jail.
I'm sorry Bob, you have no aesthetic value, so you're going to jail.
When I was a little Big Bad I tried my hand at photography. Back then it was a stunningly expensive hobby so I was sent to a class to learn some basics before being entrusted with an actual camera and stuff. One of the first things we did as a class was to take pictures of every day items and try to portray them in a different light. Those shots were not to include any people, a study of whom was to come later, and were to be local.

It was more of a challenge than you might think.

Since it was my first attempt at anything like that I was very pleased to get a B and some nice comments from the teacher. Time went on and my interest in photography waned. Not for any specific reason other than video was developing then and I really wanted to work with moving images. Which is something I’ve now been doing, on and off, for almost 3 decades.

As it turns out, my entire photography class and most every music video director in the world, would be jailed in California. As Gregory Moore, of the Long Beach Post, reports, cops can arrest you if you point a camera at any non-tourist location.

No, I am not making that up. Sheesh, just read.

9:45am | Police Chief Jim McDonnell has confirmed that detaining photographers for taking pictures “with no apparent esthetic value” is within Long Beach Police Department policy.

McDonnell spoke for a follow-up story on a June 30 incident in which Sander Roscoe Wolff, a Long Beach resident and regular contributor to Long Beach Post, was detained by Officer Asif Kahn for taking pictures of a North Long Beach refinery.

“If an officer sees someone taking pictures of something like a refinery,” says McDonnell, “it is incumbent upon the officer to make contact with the individual.” McDonnell went on to say that whether said contact becomes detainment depends on the circumstances the officer encounters.

McDonnell says that while there is no police training specific to determining whether a photographer’s subject has “apparent esthetic value,” officers make such judgments “based on their overall training and experience” and will generally approach photographers not engaging in “regular tourist behavior.”

This policy apparently falls under the rubric of compiling Suspicious Activity Reports (SAR) as outlined in the Los Angeles Police Department’s Special Order No. 11, a March 2008 statement of the LAPD’s “policy … to make every effort to accurately and appropriately gather, record and analyze information, of a criminal or non-criminal nature, that could indicate activity or intentions related to either foreign or domestic terrorism.”

Among the non-criminal behaviors “which shall be reported on a SAR” are the usage of binoculars and cameras (presumably when observing a building, although this is not specified), asking about an establishment’s hours of operation, taking pictures or video footage “with no apparent esthetic value,” and taking notes.

Also listed as behaviors to be documented are “Attempts to acquire illegal or illicit biological agent (anthrax, ricin, Eboli, smallpox, etc.),” “In possession, or utilizes, explosives (for illegal purposes),” and “Acquires or attempts to acquire uniforms without a legitimate cause (service personnel, government uniforms, etc.).” Special Order No. 11 does not distinguish between how these behaviors should be handled and how (e.g.) photography should be handled.

McDonnell says that LBPD policy is “on-line” with all instructions contained in Special Order No. 11, “as is everyone else [i.e., other police departments] around the country.”

In response to Long Beach Post’s coverage of the incident, the National Press Photographer’s Association has written to Chief McDonnell expressing concern “about the misplaced beliefs that photography is in and of itself a suspicious activity.”

Deputy City Attorney Gary Anderson says that the legal standard for a police officer’s detaining an individual pivots on whether the officer has “reasonable suspicion of criminal activity”; and that whether taking photographs of a refinery meets that standard “depends on the circumstances the officer is confronted with.” For that information, Anderson says, we must know what is in the officer’s mind.

Officer Kahn did not reply to repeated attempts to contact him in order to determine what was in his mind when he allegedly detained Wolff; and the LBPD Public Information Office referred pertinent questions to Anderson.

According to Anderson, Kahn claims that Wolff complied with Kahn’s request to see his license, and that it was unnecessary for him to compel Wolff to do so — a version of events Wolff flatly contradicts. “I absolutely asked him if showing him my license was necessary,” Wolff says, “which is when he gave me his little spiel about Homeland Security [allowing Kahn to detain Wolff under the circumstances].”2

Anderson reports that Kahn asserts Wolff denied being a reporter, which Wolff says is untrue. “I never denied being a reporter,” Wolff says. “He never asked me about being a reporter. He asked me why I was taking pictures, and I told him that I was an artist.”

Regarding whether Kahn felt Wolff’s behavior gave him “reasonable suspicion of criminal activity,” Anderson initially replied, “I never asked [Kahn] that question.” Agreeing that “we can’t go any further in discussing [whether Kahn had ‘reasonable suspicion of criminal activity’] without knowing what was in the officer’s mind in this specific instance,” Anderson agreed to follow up with Kahn on that matter.

However, when reached 10 days later, Anderson stated, “I’m not going to get into the officer’s subjective state of mind at this point. … That’s attorney-client privilege.”

As to why Anderson failed to cite attorney-client privilege initially, Anderson says only that he has “been thinking about it more”; and, “We have no further comment. Seriously.”

  • 1 After running Wolff’s driver’s license, Kahn left the scene without ordering Wolff to desist.
  • 2 Legally, a police detention has occurred when “a reasonable individual” in that circumstance would be believe he or she is not free to leave.

First off, the fatal disease is called Ebola, not Eboli. I believe the latter is a children’s game in North Korea.

Now, seriously, how is this even a law? What kind of brain dead moron decided that this was a good idea? Every college campus now has thousands of instant delinquents. If you don’t believe me just suffer through any campus’ “art fair” which will include hundreds of pics of stairs and buildings and manhole covers.

Yes, I understand the whole point of such images. When done well they show the photographer’s grasp of color and contrast and shading and many things. When not done well they show a manhole cover.

But none of them show a reason for these kids to do jail time.

Beliy Plaschik (Uncensored) – Funny videos are here

Listen to Bill McCormick on WBIG AM 1280, every Thursday morning around 9:10!

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