Los Angeles Times

Concert camera ban hits sour note

Pershing Square shows forbid profession­al gear — a rule ACLU calls unconstitu­tional.

- By Cindy Chang cindy.chang@latimes.com Twitter: @cindychang­LA

A civil liberties group has filed a lawsuit on behalf of a photograph­er alleging the city of Los Angeles is enforcing an unconstitu­tional ban on profession­al camera equipment at its Pershing Square summer concert series.

Cliff Cheng arrived at Pershing Square on Saturday to photograph a concert by the B-52s as well as a petition-drive by an anti-oil industry group, according to the suit filed Wednesday by the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California.

He was wearing multiple press identifica­tion cards and carried a Canon digital single-lens reflex camera.

Security guards prevented Cheng from entering the park, citing the ban on cameras, the suit said.

Profession­al photograph­ers typically use DSLR cameras with interchang­eable lenses such as the one Cheng had.

The ban originally included “video, photo and audio devices,” such as iPads and profession­al photograph­y equipment, but did not extend to cellphone cameras.

After Cheng, who works for publicatio­ns at Los Angeles City College, complained and the ACLU wrote a letter, the ban was redefined.

According to the website for the Saturday night concert series, which includes bands such as the Wallflower­s and Toad the Wet Sprocket, flash photograph­y and profession­al camera equipment, including camera stands and cameras with detachable lenses, are prohibited.

The website also states that promotiona­l fliers cannot be distribute­d at the concerts without written permission.

Rose Watson, a spokespers­on for the Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks, said the performers requested that there be no flash photograph­y.

The concerts are so crowded that photograph­ers, even profession­als, need to make do with smaller cameras, she said.

“Space is so tight, bumper to bumper, wall to wall,” she said.

The ban on photograph­y equipment has been in place for nine years, since the concert series’ inception, she added.

The National Press Photograph­ers Assn. is a coplaintif­f in the lawsuit, which alleges that Cheng’s 1st Amendment rights were violated.

The plaintiffs, represente­d by civil rights attorney Carol Sobel and attorneys from the ACLU, are seeking a court injunction to end the bans on photograph­y equipment and distributi­ng fliers.

Mickey Osterreich­er, the associatio­n’s general counsel, wrote in a legal declaratio­n that profession­al photograph­ers typically do not carry much equipment and are used to moving unobtrusiv­ely in large crowds.

“If there are legitimate fears that the crowd is so large that it is dangerous, the appropriat­e response is to limit the overall crowd size, not ban photograph­ers,” Osterreich­er wrote.

The last concert in the series, featuring the bands X and Meat Puppets, takes place Saturday.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THE ACLU has filed a lawsuit on behalf of a photograph­er who wasn’t allowed to bring his camera equipment into Pershing Square’s summer concert series. Above, a small crowd gathers for a show at the park in 2014.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE ACLU has filed a lawsuit on behalf of a photograph­er who wasn’t allowed to bring his camera equipment into Pershing Square’s summer concert series. Above, a small crowd gathers for a show at the park in 2014.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States