Comment Re:Pennsylvania case allows videotaping state troo (Score 1) 1232
Disputes over police videotaping are becoming more common.
The Pennsylvia decision is not federal, unfortunately, but it states some good principles: "The activities of the police, like those of other public officials, are subject to public scrutiny...Videotaping is a legitimate means of gathering information for public dissemination...there can be no doubt that the free speech clause of the Constitution protected Robinson as he videotaped the defendants...Moreover, to the extent that the troopers were restraining Robinson from making any future videotapes and from publicizing or publishing what he had filmed, the defendants' conduct clearly amounted to an unlawful prior restraint upon his protected speech....We find that defendants are liable under 1983 for violating Robinson's Fourth Amendment right to be protected from an unlawful seizure..."
The Pennsylvia decision is not federal, unfortunately, but it states some good principles: "The activities of the police, like those of other public officials, are subject to public scrutiny...Videotaping is a legitimate means of gathering information for public dissemination...there can be no doubt that the free speech clause of the Constitution protected Robinson as he videotaped the defendants...Moreover, to the extent that the troopers were restraining Robinson from making any future videotapes and from publicizing or publishing what he had filmed, the defendants' conduct clearly amounted to an unlawful prior restraint upon his protected speech....We find that defendants are liable under 1983 for violating Robinson's Fourth Amendment right to be protected from an unlawful seizure..."