Thursday, December 31, 2015

Make recording an on-duty police officer a felony on par with sexual assault — punishable by 15 years in prison.

It does not concern you. You should mind you own Business. How would like it if the police went to your work and filmed you. Would you like it if the police bothered you at work

Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police debunks the myth that people have the "right" to film Police:
“You have 960,000 police officers in this country, and millions of contacts between those officers and citizens. I’ll bet you can’t name 10 incidents where a citizen video has shown a police officer to have lied on a police report. Letting people record police officers is an extreme and intrusive response to a problem that’s so rare it might as well not exist. It would be like saying we should do away with DNA evidence because there’s a one in a billion chance that it could be wrong. At some point, we have to put some faith and trust in our authority figures.” “Police officers don’t check their civil rights at the station house door.”

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