Man faces 75 years for recording cops

taktikz

WF Veteran
Oct 22, 2008
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Tampa, FL
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNlJYSIzjoU&feature=related]Courageous Illinois Man Faces 75 Years In Prison For Recording Cops - YouTube[/ame]

Fucking ridiculous how this is even illegal in some states.
 


SCUMBAG UNITED STATES

passes Patriot Act allowing warrantless wire tapping of it's citizens
then
makes it illegal to record public officials in public
 
I'd assume this will fail legally on the basis the recording took place in public - and so the 'information / media' was already public and so eavesdropping was impossible given anyone on the street would hear / see what was going on.

The fact the state prosecutor is spending public money to scare people to protect local government and members of the executive is amazing.
 
Wow, that's complete and utter bullshit. It's amazing why they wonder why no one trusts or likes the police any more.
 
This is one of these reports from the USA that makes me glad I don't live there. Recording illegal activities of police officers is... illegal now? Give me a fucking break!
 
Surely there would be no way this would ever go through.

If an innocent man like this got sent down I would hope there would be uproar country wide.

Idiots
 
This is one of these reports from the USA that makes me glad I don't live there. Recording illegal activities of police officers is... illegal now? Give me a fucking break!

Yeah, stupid USA, in other countries the police would just shoot you, no drama
 
fucking bullshit man, big government breathing down our necks taking away more and more rights
 
I have a question for those of you who are enraged about this story:

You clearly believe a person has the right to film cops,* and are understandably angered by the idea of imprisoning someone for exerting that right. Are you equally enraged by the state's violation of countless other rights?

Or is your opinion on this matter informed only by disdain for cops?




* Whether that right is protected by the Constitution and amendments is beside the point since such rights have been trampled upon for generations.
 
I have a question for those of you who are enraged about this story:

You clearly believe a person has the right to film cops,* and are understandably angered by the idea of imprisoning someone for exerting that right. Are you equally enraged by the state's violation of countless other rights?

Or is your opinion on this matter informed only by disdain for cops?




* Whether that right is protected by the Constitution and amendments is beside the point since such rights have been trampled upon for generations.

Maybe you could be a bit more specific, but I'm enraged about the shit I know about, especially the post 9/11 stuff like denying habeas corpus, warrantless wiretapping, etc.

Kind of curious, what specifically were you thinking about?
 
Because the guy is going to be released then the overall system has worked. It is unfortunate that there are not repercussions against prosecutorial abuse. That is the real problem. The prosecutor gets to abuse their power and ruin the life of the individual without any personal liability.
 
Because the guy is going to be released then the overall system has worked. It is unfortunate that there are not repercussions against prosecutorial abuse. That is the real problem. The prosecutor gets to abuse their power and ruin the life of the individual without any personal liability.

Unless I missed something, we don't know that he's going to be released and could very well go to prison although I doubt it will be for 75 years.
 
Land of the FREE???

It's the new slave trade, hold out for the facts and figure at just over 2minutes.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPZed8af9RI]Stephen Fry on American Prisons Facts - YouTube[/ame]