God I'm being sloppy on this thread. Sorry for the spam.
Cop is always right so all you can do is protect your gear and avoid being locked up on a trumped up charge. I was told I could not take a photo of a bridge while I was in a public park. I was also told cameras were banned from that park lol. Now holding 5 grand worth of camera im not about to go all perry mason on this guy. I just said ok and walked away. Sucks but thats the way it is now a days.
This isn't
actually correct, but in some ways it is
practically correct.
The cop isn't always right. In fact, FREQUENTLY cops are really not well versed in the rules around photography at all. I've heard plenty of examples of this and seen a few documented cases. I don't blame them... it's a bit obscure anyway, and what sometimes seems like "common sense" in this space, isn't.
However, if you puff up your chest at a cop and start asserting yourself, you're gonna get boned. As I said in my first response to all this, as much as I claim I wouldn't even show them my ID, odds are pretty good that if they had asked me for it I probably would have.
As someone wise on this thread posted- your best weapon here is humor. Make some sort of disarming funny remark and most people (including cops) will laugh and move about their business, and it won't even get to the point of IDs and such.
That said, the problem with all this is if people do not assert their rights, eventually we will lose them. This isn't alarmist stuff, it's provably true (but not without getting into all kinds of politics and stuff, which we obviously need to stay well clear of)
Ok, I'm done. Bye!