字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント Recording police officers really came to the forefront in the early '90s with the Rodney King incident. And I think since then you've seen, uh, a lot more, uh, public discussion on, on the rights of people to film law enforcement. It's about transparency. It's about understanding what our, uh, public officials are doing. Especially public officials who carry with them the ability to use force, including deadly force, to execute and enforce the law. The right of a person to film law enforcement has become less controversial as it has become more understood. And I think the ubiquity of video cameras in society today, where literally everything is filmed and thrown onto Facebook Live, has sort of illuminated this reality. There's been five or six different circuit courts of appeal decisions affecting more than 60% of the US population that have affirmed the right of individuals to film law enforcement in public while law enforcement officers are engaged in their official capacity as police officers. Most officers today understand that the public has a right to film police officers when they are engaged in their official capacity as an officer and they're in public. If you're lawfully recording the police officer in a public place and he or she tells you to stop recording, again, you're under no legal obligation to stop. The big source of contention seems to come is when people take that right and they infringe upon the officer's ability to, uh, safely execute their job. It's important to understand when a police officer tells you to, to move back or to get across the street, it's not necessarily because they're trying to stop you from recording them, It's because you're compromising their officer safety or you're inhibiting their ability to perform their duty. When you cross that line, then while the act of filming may not in and of itself be illegal, you're engaging in other illegal, uh, activity which could lead to your arrest. It's hard to provide concrete guidelines to the public because everything's contextual. Every situation is different. So then it's always best to heed to the, uh, to the warnings of the officer. I think the goal of cameras, body-worn cameras, dash cams, or what have you, is not just to protect the citizenry, but it's also to protect law enforcement. Law enforcement officers who adopt body-worn cameras soon realize that those cameras are a lot more helpful to them than they are a hindrance. It's a good thing that law enforcement understands that that transparency exists. It's good for the officers, it's good for the public.
B1 中級 米 市民は警察官を撮影する権利があるのか?[POLICYEBRIEF] (Do Citizens Have a Right to Film Police Officers? [POLICYbrief]) 46 2 Shinichiro に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語