- Feb 5, 2011
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...king-stomping-man-theyd-subdued-stun-gun.html
The growing ubiquity of cameras will have one overwhelmingly positive outcome, which is the improved honesty of police. I know there are many who think that police acting in public in their public capacity should be immune to being filmed, and in some areas there are even laws against it. I can't wait until somebody brings such a law in front of SCOTUS and says once and for all yes it is legal. I would even argue it's one's civic duty. Without cameras, it can be difficult to tell the sheep (a normal cop) from the wolves in sheep's clothing (the animals, like the three in this video).
How there is still an open investigation over this is beyond me. Unless their argument is that they were taken over by an evil spirit it's pretty damn cut and dry.
The growing ubiquity of cameras will have one overwhelmingly positive outcome, which is the improved honesty of police. I know there are many who think that police acting in public in their public capacity should be immune to being filmed, and in some areas there are even laws against it. I can't wait until somebody brings such a law in front of SCOTUS and says once and for all yes it is legal. I would even argue it's one's civic duty. Without cameras, it can be difficult to tell the sheep (a normal cop) from the wolves in sheep's clothing (the animals, like the three in this video).
How there is still an open investigation over this is beyond me. Unless their argument is that they were taken over by an evil spirit it's pretty damn cut and dry.