Why not? Like if a photographer sues a cop for confiscating their equipment and deleting images. Sure it boils down to destruction of property/evidence, but it lays down an official precedent that says a law enforcement officer can't just take a photographer's camera and delete images from their camera because you don't like it and you think it's wrong.
That's directly regarding photography.
You started getting the point and then fell back into being a photographer, it's not about photography, it is about the 4th Amendment, search and seizure. That is the point I am trying to make. There are no special rules, laws or constitutional guarantees granted to photographers.
Every 4th Amendment issue is judged on it's own merits based on the facts of the incident be it photographs/photographers, computers/users-owners, or left handed 3 wheel widgets/and their owners. Some 4th Amendments situations are painfully obvious and some are not requiring the intercession of the courts to make a determination.
If you want to avoid hassles and make situations like these easier to deal with and get on with your life or shooting, you need to understand not only all of your rights, but all of your responsibilities. When evaluating a situation look past the trees and see the forest.
Your argument is irrelevant. Sure it is about photography. If the guy in the latest video had not been filming the police there would have been no confrontation. In other incidents, if the guy had not been taking pictures of a building or a refinery there would not have been a confrontation with police. If guys had not been taking photos in the New York subway, there would not have been confrontations with the police. When police are telling photographers that they can't take pictures then it is definitely about photography. When a judge says that the police are wrong, and photographers can take pictures in a public place, then it is also about photography.
Of course, if it is about your rights, the same perspective holds true, it is about your rights to express your creativity through photography and to utilize your camera equipment to do so, covered under the Constitution.
As I said before that is not my take, that is the take of the American press, judges, and lawyers for all sides of the issues.
You seem to be implying that if you don"t want hassles, then you should give up your rights. That position puts the boot to the American rhetoric that other countries keep hearing about Americans standing up for freedom and the rights of the individual.
So, you seem to be saying that the true rhetoric is that photographers should be setting an example for others by asserting their rights ONLY IF IT IS CONVENIENT and presents no sort of risk
Interesting!
skieur
Actually I strongly encourage everyone to know and use their rights. However I also strongly encourage everyone to also accept the
responsibility that goes with those rights. I'm going to do something here that I normally do not do, because like everyone here except for the OP, I wasn't there. Let's look at what the OP posted and break it down a bit.
I just got my Tamron 17-50 at the post office and naturally had to go out and take some test photos with it. I was babysitting tonight so I took my 3 year old daughter with me for a walk down the block
2 house from mine, there was some kind of bush that interested me. So, I decided to take a picture, while my daughter was playing with something on the lawn next to me and tried different angles, naturally standing close to the bush and moving around.
Ok, can someone see a problem with any of this. I can't.
Finally I took a picture and turned around to see some people across the street, looking very suspiciously at me. I didn't think much about it, but 2-3 minutes later, a motorcop came over and rode his bike right over the sidewalk to intercept me.
I am going to speculate here based my years of experience.
Some people across the street, looking very suspiciously at me. Who probably called in what
they considered suspicious activity. The motorcop was probably close and responded because they were close. Motorcops in most jurisdictions don't ride beats and patrol a particular area, they are usually traffic officers. When they received the call they got it from a dispatcher. They knew neither the calling party or the person called in on. What they knew was that a citizen, exercising their right to feel protected, called in what they perceived to be a suspicious character or suspicious activity.
He demanded to know where i lived, who was the girl with me, what did I take a picture off. After I showed him the picture on the camera and the bush, my ID and walked with him to my house, he was satisfied and left.
His actions were based upon reasonable suspicion based upon the call that the officer received. The officer detained the OP and gathered the basic information necessary to either make a determination at that point or to continue the investigations. The OP obviously provided the information necessary for the officer to make a determination that, contrary to what the calling party(s) believed there was no suspicious activity and went back to what ever they were doing before responding to the call.
Those people were very disappointed and finally walked away as well.
Tough $#!%. Their disappointment really doesn't matter.
that made me think, how boring must be life for some people and how intrusive and nosy can people be! On the other hand, should I be happy that we have those people around as next time they could prevent real crime from happening?
We all have different perceptions, of what is around us. The important word in that sentence is perceptions. If we all as human beings saw the same thing we wouldn't be having this discussion and I would be out of a job.
While i appreciate the fact that the OP was detained for a bit and inconvenienced for a short period of time. The OP could have acted in another manner. But in this situation what purpose would acting differently have accomplished other than to lengthen the detention until the officer had their suspicions satisfied.
As for calling parties like the probable ones in this situation, yes there are those that can be a pain in the neck (think 3 feet lower

) but are you wiling to take on the vicarious liability of choosing to ignore a call for services like this.
Whenever there is a situation like this there are three sides of the story, yours, theirs, and the truth. The truth is usually found somewhere in the middle of the other two. Again that word perception comes into play.
Oh, the bush in question:
Nice picture.
No one thinks twice if an officer responds to a call of a person with a gun in their hand on a busy street. That gun is a single purpose item. It is designed to inflict damage, be it human, animal or a target of some kind. Target practice isn't something that happens legally on public streets.
Photographers and many others with other items that they carry with them and use are dual purpose items. That camera can be used to record events, create art, create memories or it can be used to provide intelligence for those with nefarious intentions.
The probabilities are that in this
photo there is at least one person that is or has criminal intent. Can you pick out that person?
Like I said in a previous post, if you are in a situation like this, or any situation, step back and look at the forest, not just the trees.