How dumb are you nutters. This is entry level autism.
They don't allow filming because it can compromise any investigator's identity. You taking pictures of the cops and FBI, and posting then online? Duh.
Even you aren't persay, you're filming the scene of an investigation. It has hit the net with. Until it simply doesn't matter. The policy is faster no filming. In many cases filming cops is a crime. Try it, go film your local beat cop on patrol. Follow the cop, walking the street and film them. What happens you dumbasses?
There are some guys that have made a living out of filming cops, and getting settlements from their actions on camera. In several circuits, it is explicitly legal. In others, it just hasn't been firmly decided, and is a topic SCOTUS likes to avoid. However, especially if it's to be uploaded onto the internet, it would be a clear 1st ammendment violation. A government employee has no more right to privacy in public than anyone else.
Apology in America it must be legal, in Europe it's potential imprisonment unless there are valid reasons. They can seize anything filming them and charge with crimes. Publishing them online is an obvious crime.
But okay I presume on active scenes of investigation. It's the above. Like filming Miltary installations. Similar concept. America has those laws.
Filming cops, problematic. Half and half depending on the cops and State. What about FBI, Swat, other agencies. That line is now blurred.
How dumb are you nutters. This is entry level autism.
They don't allow filming because it can compromise any investigator's identity. You taking pictures of the cops and FBI, and posting then online? Duh.
Even you aren't persay, you're filming the scene of an investigation. It has hit the net with. Until it simply doesn't matter. The policy is faster no filming. In many cases filming cops is a crime. Try it, go film your local beat cop on patrol. Follow the cop, walking the street and film them. What happens you dumbasses?
It's videos like this that make you real dumb.
There are some guys that have made a living out of filming cops, and getting settlements from their actions on camera. In several circuits, it is explicitly legal. In others, it just hasn't been firmly decided, and is a topic SCOTUS likes to avoid. However, especially if it's to be uploaded onto the internet, it would be a clear 1st ammendment violation. A government employee has no more right to privacy in public than anyone else.
Apology in America it must be legal, in Europe it's potential imprisonment unless there are valid reasons. They can seize anything filming them and charge with crimes. Publishing them online is an obvious crime.
But okay I presume on active scenes of investigation. It's the above. Like filming Miltary installations. Similar concept. America has those laws.
Filming cops, problematic. Half and half depending on the cops and State. What about FBI, Swat, other agencies. That line is now blurred.