Los Angeles Times

Filming law enforcemen­t

-

Re “Watching the police,” Editorial, April 23

Thank you for reaffirmin­g the right of citizens to film law enforcemen­t and recognizin­g its importance in driving the muchneeded debate on policing in our country.

My constituen­t Beatriz Paez had every right to film what she saw in her neighborho­od, as did another South Gate resident who captured and made public footage of the deputy U.S. marshal grabbing and smashing Paez’s phone, terrifying her and violating her rights.

We must make it perfectly clear that Americans have a constituti­onal right to videotape law enforcemen­t and should film whenever they want to, as long as they are not interferin­g in an arrest.

I am calling on incoming Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch to order a Justice Department investigat­ion of the incident and to make sure that all law enforcemen­t officers are trained to respect the right of citizens to videotape them. Rep. Janice Hahn

(D-San Pedro)

Recently, there has developed a significan­t subculture of videograph­ers and documentar­ians of police activity. To the extent that this subculture is composed of echelons, I believe that Paez resides on the lowest.

The name of the person who recorded the police shooting in South Carolina is not known to most people. This is because it wasn’t about him. When he made the existence of his tape known, it was to the family of the victim.

In contrast, the focus of the videotape in the Paez incident is Paez, whose posture was aggressive, contemptuo­us and baiting. Add to that the fact that someone was focusing a camera on her.

Paez, in her role as victim, is not sympatheti­c. Phil Rose Culver City

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States