That is quite bad and stupid.  The illegal police camera seizure would
obviously caught on other cameras.  And action can be taken against
those police officers from that evidence.

  -- Enric

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "~ FluxRostrum"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> The War on Journalism
> 
> http://fluxrostrum.blogspot.com/2006/11/war-on-journalism.html
> 
> description from I-Witness Video
> http://iwitnessvideo.info
> 
> On October 30, 2006 at a demonstration protesting the murder of
journalist Brad Will in Mexico, members of the NYPD assaulted an
independent videographer and stole his videocamera.
> 
> That's right, stole. The filmmaker, FluxRostrum, was not arrested.
He did not receive a receipt for seized property. He was not even
directly asked for his camera. Instead, without any warning, he was
jumped by two police officers, one of whom is an NYPD captain, and
knocked down onto the asphalt of 39th Street. One police officer was
succcesful in wrenching the camera out of Flux's hands. As Flux
crawled around on the ground looking for the eyeglasses which had been
knocked off his face during the attack, the cop with the camera
quickly conferred with another officer. Then he ran off to hide the
camera.
> 
> When Flux attempted to get his camera back after the demonstration,
he was threatened with arrest by a Lieutenant at the 17th Precinct.
His lawyer was told that camera was found "abandoned" at the scene and
that it had been turned over to the Manhattan District Attorney's
office to be used as evidence against people arrested at the Mexican
Consulate demonstration that day.
> 
> Someone at the 17th Precinct told the D.A. that the camera was found
"abandoned" on the sidewalk. Now the D.A. is insisting on keeping a
copy of the stolen videotape to use as evidence.
> 
> Is this the new normal? Is it legal just because the police say so?
> 
> If police do not have their own videocameras at events will they
simply bonk one of us over the head and steal our gear and videotapes?
What if they decide that they do not like what the videotape shows?
Will they then destroy it as has happened to so many cameras seized by
the NYPD over the past couple of years?
> 
> This story is a little hard to believe, isn't it? Fortunately, you
do not have to take my word for it. Not to be denied his voice, Flux
made a videotape about his experience at the hands of NYPD.
> 
> This is the first blog installment in an ongoing I-Witness Video
investigation, The War on Cameras.
> 
> POSTED BY
>     Eileen Clancy
> 
> 
> 
> Solidarity,
> ~FluxRostrum
> 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> VLOG~FLUX
> http://FluxRostrum.BlogSpot.com
> ~~~
> Syndicate Flux
> http://feeds.feedburner.com/VLOGFLUX
> ~~~
> Old School
> http://Fluxview.com
> ~~~
> NOTICE:  Due to Presidential Executive Orders, the National Security
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They may do this without any judicial or legislative oversight. You
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> ~~~
> 
> 
> -- 
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