http://www.2600.com/news/display/display.shtml?id=1441

PHOTOGRAPHER ARRESTED FOR TAKING PICTURES OF VICE PRESIDENT'S HOTEL 
Posted 5 Dec 2002 06:03:48 UTC 

An amateur photographer named Mike Maginnis was arrested on Tuesday in
his home city of Denver - for simply taking pictures of buildings in an
area where Vice President Cheney was residing. Maginnis told his story
on Wednesday's edition of Off The Hook. 

Maginnis's morning commute took him past the Adams Mark Hotel on Court
Place. Maginnis, who says he always carried his camera wherever he went,
snapped about 30 pictures of the hotel and the surrounding area - which
included Denver police, Army rangers, and rooftop snipers. Maginnis, who
works in information technology, frequently photographs such subjects as
corporate buildings and communications equipment. 

The following is Maginnis's account of what transpired: 

As he was putting his camera away, Maginnis found himself confronted by
a Denver police officer who demanded that he hand over his film and
camera. When he refused to give up his Nikon F2, the officer pushed him
to the ground and arrested him. 

After being brought to the District 1 police station on Decatur Street,
Maginnis was made to wait alone in an interrogation room. Two hours
later, a Secret Service agent arrived, who identified himself as Special
Agent "Willse." 

The agent told Maginnis that his "suspicious activities" made him a
threat to national security, and that he would be charged as a terrorist
under the USA-PATRIOT act. The Secret Service agent tried to make
Maginnis admit that he was taking the photographs to analyze weaknesses
in the Vice President's security entourage and "cause terror and
mayhem." 

When Maginnis refused to admit to being any sort of terrorist, the
Secret Service agent called him a "raghead collaborator" and a "dirty
pinko faggot." 

After approximately an hour of interrogation, Maginnis was allowed to
make a telephone call. Rather than contacting a lawyer, he called the
Denver Post and asked for the news desk. This was immediately overheard
by the desk sergeant, who hung up the phone and placed Maginnis in a
holding cell. 

Three hours later, Maginnis was finally released, but with no
explanation. He received no copy of an arrest report, and no receipt for
his confiscated possessions. He was told that he would probably not get
his camera back, as it was being held as evidence. 

Maginnis's lawyer contacted the Denver Police Department for an
explanation of the day's events, but the police denied ever having
Maginnis - or anyone matching his description - in custody. At press
time, the Denver PD's Press Information Office did not return telephone
messages left by 2600. 

The new police powers introduced by the USA-PATRIOT act, in the name of
fighting terrorism, have been frightening in their apparent potential
for abuse. Mike Maginnis's experience on Tuesday is a poignant example
of how this abuse is beginning to occur. It suggests that a wide range
of activities which might be considered "suspicious" could be suddenly
labeled a prelude to terrorism, and be grounds for arrest. 

We will continue to post updates to this story as we learn them. 

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