Yes because that's a great idea, the Police are allowed to break the law to protect a fellow cop, that's just what we want is to encourage the police to adopt a "no rats" policy.Timotheus wrote:
2. Police figuring these asshat protestors are more likely to cause trouble and skirt the edge to irritate a cop into doing something just because there are cameras there to record it all.
Right or wrong they are just being pragmatic not political.
No serious you missed the point Timotheus, these folks(Cop-Watch, and other such groups) take Camera's and they film protests, and they follow cops around to watch them.
And when you know something happens like a cop assaulting a reporter, or a on beat cop body checks a cyclesit claiming the man "assaulted him" then you need to catch that.
I have this idea Timotheus, and maybe it's just me, but if you a cop and your being filmed then you should have no issues with it since your... you know upholding the law? We do have all sorts of special laws saying what cops can and can not do and they have many more freedom's than your average American when on duty. If your not you know... breaking the law? Then why have any issue with people filimg(At a distance) as you go about your job.
Let me reinforce that, Cop-watch and other such groups film from the sidelines(Often from inside buildings) specifiably so they don't get in the polices way. But in the last few days in St Paul the cops have sought out such groups and arrested their members without charges and taken their equipment.
That does NOT look good.