Distasteful but still not on

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What you describe is/are scenarios with massive public interest which affects many people.

Why would the public be interested in seeing a gory video of a little child under a bus?.

Why then did the newspaper deem it worthy of a quarter-page article? :shrug:
 
cobra_lite said:
Why then did the newspaper deem it worthy of a quarter-page article? :shrug:

Because maybe they were desperate for news? I didn't see it in the nationals but even so, I doubt the paper would have provided a weekend edition free DVD with the video footage on it.

Point is you can't compare it to a famine, or war. Events that change history need to be documented for public consumption. Personal event which only affect the girls family don't. IMO of course.
 
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cobra_lite said:
Why then did the newspaper deem it worthy of a quarter-page article? :shrug:

And it was front page of BBC News website too.
 
odd jim said:
What you describe is/are scenarios with massive public interest which affects many people.

Why would the public be interested in seeing a gory video of a little child under a bus?

Two entirely different scenarios.

Firstly, the post you've quoted was my reply to another post about the morality of a press photographer and so was intended to have wider scope than this particular story. It was not my intention to suggest a parallel between an Ethiopian famine and an RTA.

That said, since almost every London news outlet (and some national ones) covered the story, it would appear that a good many editors DID consider it newsworthy.
 
Llamaman said:
Firstly, the post you've quoted was my reply to another post about the morality of a press photographer and so was intended to have wider scope than this particular story. It was not my intention to suggest a parallel between an Ethiopian famine and an RTA.

That said, since almost every London news outlet (and some national ones) covered the story, it would appear that a good many editors DID consider it newsworthy.

In the context it was written in i assumed you were talking in relation to the subject of the thread.

In relation to the press coverage, did they show any gory photos or video stills?

My guess is they didn't?
 
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In relation to the press coverage, did they show any gory photos or video stills?

My guess is they didn't?

No.... The cop deleted them!
 
My attitude as a professional photographer and later as an assistant picture editor is to provide newsworthy images (I'm not saying that this incident is an example of that - a tragic road accident is just that and I suspect the only reason it made the news was her connection to a well-known stage production).

As to having to deal with grieving relatives and wash blood out of my clothes, I have - several times.
Belfast, Londonderry and Armagh during the toubles of the late 70's and 80s, Lebanon and Beirut in the '80s and 90's and Iraq and Afghanistan until I hung my cameras up in 2003 and went behind a desk for a well-earned rest.

It does get to you and I freely admit that more than once I was tempted to down tools and lend a hand rather than record what was going on. But I was there to do a job and I did it to the best of my ability.

As an assistant picture editor in London and later in Singapore, I was frequently sent images that we chose not to put on the boards for reasons of taste or out of compassion for the relatives.
It is possible to photograph an event like this without showing the faces of the victims and without being obtrusive.

I wasn't present at this incident and by the sounds of it, neither was anyone else on this Forum - therefore to speculate further as to the motives of anyone who was present is pointless.

I will say however, that if any of you had come to me as professional photographers with any of the above reasons for not getting an image of a newsworthy event, I would have fired you on the spot. No question.

Cry about it all you like, but that's the nature of the business - if you don't like it, don't get involved.
Maybe this is the difference between amateur photographers and professional news photographers, I don't know.

What absolute tosh.

To say professional photographers see this incident different to anyone else is rubbish. Maybe desperate, untalented professional photographers who can only make money taking such images would share you point of view.

The policeman was 100% correct whether what he did was legal or not.
 
My attitude as a professional photographer and later as an assistant picture editor is to provide newsworthy images (I'm not saying that this incident is an example of that - a tragic road accident is just that and I suspect the only reason it made the news was her connection to a well-known stage production).

As to having to deal with grieving relatives and wash blood out of my clothes, I have - several times.
Belfast, Londonderry and Armagh during the toubles of the late 70's and 80s, Lebanon and Beirut in the '80s and 90's and Iraq and Afghanistan until I hung my cameras up in 2003 and went behind a desk for a well-earned rest.

It does get to you and I freely admit that more than once I was tempted to down tools and lend a hand rather than record what was going on. But I was there to do a job and I did it to the best of my ability.

As an assistant picture editor in London and later in Singapore, I was frequently sent images that we chose not to put on the boards for reasons of taste or out of compassion for the relatives.
It is possible to photograph an event like this without showing the faces of the victims and without being obtrusive.

I wasn't present at this incident and by the sounds of it, neither was anyone else on this Forum - therefore to speculate further as to the motives of anyone who was present is pointless.

I will say however, that if any of you had come to me as professional photographers with any of the above reasons for not getting an image of a newsworthy event, I would have fired you on the spot. No question.

Cry about it all you like, but that's the nature of the business - if you don't like it, don't get involved.
Maybe this is the difference between amateur photographers and professional news photographers, I don't know.

After reading your post, i couldn't be bothered to go any further and thought i would reply to your post.

I am not aware of the article as obviously don't read enough papers or watch the news enough (due to it all being doom and gloom), however from what i have gathered, this individual wasn't a professional photographer getting news pics, but some random bloke on the street who wanted a bit of gore, to show to his mates down the pub and more than likely put onplaces like Youtube and so like.

These are 2 separate issues. I can see you point about the Pro coming to you and you sacking him (after all, it's his job and as stated above, it would be your decision to put them on paper), This wasn't somebody who did this for a living, so surely there are a totally different set of rules. At the time it would be like yes, get the film, but what would he say if it was his child and somebody else taking the film, not happy i would have thought.

Personally, i think the policeman made the right decision.
 
Quaker said:
The policeman was 100% correct whether what he did was legal or not.

By definition it is impossible to be 100% correct and illegal!

Sent from my iPhone using TP Forums
 
By definition it is impossible to be 100% correct and illegal!

Sent from my iPhone using TP Forums

Not from a moral point of view it isn't :shrug:
 
What absolute tosh.

To say professional photographers see this incident different to anyone else is rubbish. Maybe desperate, untalented professional photographers who can only make money taking such images would share you point of view.

The policeman was 100% correct whether what he did was legal or not.

Do people still say 'tosh'...? :shrug:

Looks like they bally well do, old bean...
 
You what?!

Get off your Daily Mail high horse mate.

Are you telling me that Robert Capa, Larry Burrows, Shannon Stapleton, Goran Tomasevic, Edmond Terakopian, me, cobra_lite and any number of other people are desperate and untalented because we cover hard news?!?

Do one...

But this incident wasnt hard news really.

Fair enough something newsworthy with massive public interest, such as the Diana crash, wars, historical events etc - these are the only justifiable events where one might understand putting a videophone into a dying persons face, but not this incident. I've covered the public interest aspect in my other posts so wont blab on about them in this one.

Would those fine photographers you have listed carried out the actions of this idiot with the videophone or would they put their talents to more useful, justifiable and relevant use?
 
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Do you not think this sets a dangerous precedent then? Blimey, it's already hard enough to justify "public interest" in journalism without having the actions of a hot-headed bobby buggering things up for those of us who do it for a living and aren't a gore whore.

No, but everyone needs to know where the line is... Its part of judging the incident when you arrive and assess the situation.

You yourself agree its distasteful. Out of interest, and not to judge you personally, but would you have carried out the same actions as the guy with the videophone (bearing in mind he didnt even know she was an upcoming ballet dancer?)

EDIT - and remember this guy wasn't a press tog, just a passing member of the public. And the officer, not that I'm condoning his actions, had to contend with protecting a very distressing scene, protecting and helping the child, and dealing with the mother of the child who was present and extremely distressed.
 
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But this incident wasnt hard news really.

Fair enough something newsworthy with massive public interest, such as the Diana crash, wars, historical events etc - these are the only justifiable events where one might understand putting a videophone into a dying persons face, but not this incident. I've covered the public interest aspect in my other posts so wont blab on about them in this one.

Would those fine photographers you have listed carried out the actions of this idiot with the videophone or would they put their talents to more useful, justifiable and relevant use?

Of course it was hard news; that's defined by the timeline, not necessarily the subject matter.
 
No, but everyone needs to know where the line is... Its part of judging the incident when you arrive and assess the situation.

You yourself agree its distasteful. Out of interest, and not to judge you personally, but would you have carried out the same actions as the guy with the videophone (bearing in mind he didnt even know she was an upcoming ballet dancer?)

Well, we're still not entirely clear what actions the guy with the videophone took...however;

I am a press photographer, 95% of the time I have a camera on me...that's my job. If I happened to be walking along and saw this incident, I would make sure I had my Press Card visible, and take some shots of the scene, carefully trying to avoid making anyone recognisable. I go for two "categories" in these sort of situations, think of it as NSFW or Safe.

Safe shots would be the sort of things such as, general police car/ambulance shots, cordon shots, bus shots...something that illustrates the scene. Depending on the prevailing mood (ie. am I about to get my head ripped off by the general public) I might go for something which illustrates the story better than a shot of a bus. Perhaps a shot of a bus with paramedics near it. Difficult to judge without having been there.

As you said, he didn't know it was an up and coming ballerina...it could've been Kate Moss, Boris Johnson, Nelson Mandela or Lord Lucan hand in hand with Bigfoot and the Loch Ness monster. If I didn't know who it was, I'd be doing my job...ironically, if I DID know it was a small child which as you said probably isn't "hard news", I'd be less inclined to do so.

If I'm in any doubt, I'll get the shot and then make a journalistic judgement on whether it gets submitted.

Does that make me a horrible person? In your eyes probably yes.

Am I doing my job? Yes.

Do I always enjoy my job? Tell me anyone that does.

Just like any job, journalism has it's dark moments...ask any reporter about their first "death knock".
 
Of course it was hard news; that's defined by the timeline, not necessarily the subject matter.

But the subject matter defines how newsworthy it is, surely?
 
Well, we're still not entirely clear what actions the guy with the videophone took...however;

I am a press photographer, 95% of the time I have a camera on me...that's my job. If I happened to be walking along and saw this incident, I would make sure I had my Press Card visible, and take some shots of the scene, carefully trying to avoid making anyone recognisable. I go for two "categories" in these sort of situations, think of it as NSFW or Safe.

Safe shots would be the sort of things such as, general police car/ambulance shots, cordon shots, bus shots...something that illustrates the scene. Depending on the prevailing mood (ie. am I about to get my head ripped off by the general public) I might go for something which illustrates the story better than a shot of a bus. Perhaps a shot of a bus with paramedics near it. Difficult to judge without having been there.

As you said, he didn't know it was an up and coming ballerina...it could've been Kate Moss, Boris Johnson, Nelson Mandela or Lord Lucan hand in hand with Bigfoot and the Loch Ness monster. If I didn't know who it was, I'd be doing my job...ironically, if I DID know it was a small child which as you said probably isn't "hard news", I'd be less inclined to do so.

If I'm in any doubt, I'll get the shot and then make a journalistic judgement on whether it gets submitted.

Does that make me a horrible person? In your eyes probably yes.

Am I doing my job? Yes.

Do I always enjoy my job? Tell me anyone that does.

Just like any job, journalism has it's dark moments...ask any reporter about their first "death knock".

Of course that doesn't make you a bad person, but the point you've put across is that you'd cover it professionally and probably sensitively, ie, if you wanted a shot of the bus I'd take it you'd use a longish lens and not do it right in the faces of the attending emergency workers and the girls mother.

That to me is far more acceptable, regardless of the overall morals of the situation, and furthermore would avoid conflict with the attending police officers.
 
No, but everyone needs to know where the line is... Its part of judging the incident when you arrive and assess the situation.

You yourself agree its distasteful. Out of interest, and not to judge you personally, but would you have carried out the same actions as the guy with the videophone (bearing in mind he didnt even know she was an upcoming ballet dancer?)

EDIT - and remember this guy wasn't a press tog, just a passing member of the public. And the officer, not that I'm condoning his actions, had to contend with protecting a very distressing scene, protecting and helping the child, and dealing with the mother of the child who was present and extremely distressed.
And where the law is?.
The issue isn't that it was bad taste to photograph the scene, you have to remember were are a multicultural society, you can't assign your values to other people. For me the issue is that a "trained" police office let his emotions get in the way of the law, they above all else have to take the law seriously, and not make it up as they feel like, thats the goverment (elected by us) is job.
Franky if a simple RTC has that much impact on an office I can't help wondering if he's in the right job. I have seen and delt with some terrible incidents during my life, none made me loose control.
 
Many years ago as a young copper I attended the scene of an accident where a 15 year old lad had fallen off his bike in front of a bus on a steep incline. He ended up under the back axle of the bus pretty mangled up with his bike and conscious but slowly suffocating. We couldn't get the bus jacked up without it rolling back and had to send for heavy lifting equipment and were waiting for another bus to park behind it to prevent it rolling.

Two of us had crawled under the bus and were talking to the lad offering him what comfort we could - but he died. At this point a local freelance photographer well known as an ambulance chaser started to crawl under the bus to take pictures. He was told to **** off in no uncertain terms!

I think some people contributing to this thread need a serious reality check - this isn't about your civil liberties collapsing around your ears, it's about simple decency and common sense. We still don't know enough about this case, but no doubt the copper involved had enough on his plate with the accident without having to get involved wtih arresting some passing nobber with a mobile phone who clearly hadn't got the sense of a gnat!

Policemen make decisions on the spot all the time and not always within the letter of the law - i did many times, and always found that if I'd acted reasonably in the circumstances there was little to worry about from any court in the land.
 
I think we're confusing 2 different acts here.

The Policeman was wrong to do what he did - fact in law.

The little scrote was very, very wrong in doing what he did. Not legally, but morally by most peoples standards.

The policeman should have pointed out to the scrote the error of his ways.. in whatever legal fashion he deemed suitable, as I would have done.

It's not however IMHO for people to carry out illegal acts if they find the actions of someone else immoral.

That's not a recipe for a civilised society.
 
And where the law is?.
The issue isn't that it was bad taste to photograph the scene, you have to remember were are a multicultural society, you can't assign your values to other people. For me the issue is that a "trained" police office let his emotions get in the way of the law, they above all else have to take the law seriously, and not make it up as they feel like, thats the goverment (elected by us) is job.
Franky if a simple RTC has that much impact on an office I can't help wondering if he's in the right job. I have seen and delt with some terrible incidents during my life, none made me loose control.

How bloody condescending that you wonder of he's in the right job. Who said he let his emotions get the better of him? I wasn't there, but it's a fair bet that with the girl's hysterical mother at the scene and a crowd of onlookers witnessing this idiot's actions, there was every likelihood of a breach of Tbe Peace occurring for which he could have been arrested, I don't see this as anything but an on- the- spot decision by the officer, who had more pressing things to do at the time than be dealing with this idiot. There's certainly no implication that he 'lost control.'

The final arbiter in these matters is a court of law - that's who he answers to - not some of you - thankfully!
 
Not from a moral point of view it isn't :shrug:

So are you saying that the role of the Police is to enforce moral codes rather than the Law?

If so, whose moral code? The code of the Police officer or the majority of the public?
 
And where the law is?.
The issue isn't that it was bad taste to photograph the scene, you have to remember were are a multicultural society, you can't assign your values to other people. For me the issue is that a "trained" police office let his emotions get in the way of the law, they above all else have to take the law seriously, and not make it up as they feel like, thats the goverment (elected by us) is job.
Franky if a simple RTC has that much impact on an office I can't help wondering if he's in the right job. I have seen and delt with some terrible incidents during my life, none made me loose control.

I totally agree with everything you've said.

I think a lot of people posting here have let the emotive nature of the subject matter (the death of a small child is tragic) cloud their judgment. One needs to consider the bigger picture (no pun intended) here - if the Police don't respect the rule of law, who will? Can we give the police carte blanche to ignore the law when they see fit, and expect them to use those powers fairly?

If Policing is driven by morality, whose morality?
If the morality of the public, that's caving into mob rule. Surely the point of a liberal democracy is that the rights of minorities to live their lives in ways that may not be to the taste of the majority -but are none-the-less legal - should be protected.
If the morality of the officer, that way madness lies. What if the officer has views that are political, xenophobic, homophobic? How should he act then?

The role of the police must be to uphold the law. If society feels strongly enough that they wish to stop something, that is the role of parliament to legislate, which is then enforced by the police.
 
I wasn't there, but it's a fair bet that
Cue wild speculation...

with the girl's hysterical mother at the scene and a crowd of onlookers witnessing this idiot's actions, there was every likelihood of a breach of Tbe Peace occurring for which he could have been arrested, I don't see this as anything but an on- the- spot decision by the officer, who had more pressing things to do at the time than be dealing with this idiot.
If there was a breach of the peace, he could have used the powers granted to him to caution or arrest the guy and/or confiscate his phone as evidence. He did neither, instead choosing a course of action for which he had no legal authority.
There's certainly no implication that he 'lost control.'
There's plenty - see above. He chose to dispense with the tools granted to him by parliament and instead act in an extra-jucidicial manner. That sounds like someone losing the plot.

The final arbiter in these matters is a court of law - that's who he answers to - not some of you - thankfully!
Er, that's the point. It should have been the courts that decided whether the photos need to be deleted as they are the body that have such power - NOT the police. In arbitrarilly deleting the photos without authority, he has usurped the powers of the Courts.

I am amazed at how many of you seem so keen to hand over incredible powers to the Police with no checks or balances on that power. They have a less than stellar record in this area (remember Anti-Terrorism powers being used to arrest a man asking a question at the Labour Party Conference, just days after the Police Commisisoner assured parliament that the powers would not be used lightly?).
 
The role of the police must be to uphold the law.
I thought it was law and ORDER in which case getting him to stop was exactly the right course of action?

The legality of deleting the video is a different question but as the scrote obviously didn't have any common decency (press photographers would have legitimate cause to capture events) I don't have an issue with it. There's law then there's justice.
 
You what?!

Get off your Daily Mail high horse mate.

Are you telling me that Robert Capa, Larry Burrows, Shannon Stapleton, Goran Tomasevic, Edmond Terakopian, me, cobra_lite and any number of other people are desperate and untalented because we cover hard news?!?

Do one...

I would say that those highlighted wouldn't think about trying to make a quick buck out of something so tragic as this young girls death, I suspect they are not that desperate.

Do one yourself matey. You need to get some morals.
 
How bloody condescending that you wonder of he's in the right job. Who said he let his emotions get the better of him? I wasn't there, but it's a fair bet that with the girl's hysterical mother at the scene and a crowd of onlookers witnessing this idiot's actions, there was every likelihood of a breach of Tbe Peace occurring for which he could have been arrested, I don't see this as anything but an on- the- spot decision by the officer, who had more pressing things to do at the time than be dealing with this idiot. There's certainly no implication that he 'lost control.'

The final arbiter in these matters is a court of law - that's who he answers to - not some of you - thankfully!

Then he should have arrested the photographer or told him to move on, not break the law he's paid by US to uphold.
 
I thought it was law and ORDER in which case getting him to stop was exactly the right course of action?
You are right that the role of the Police is also to maintain order - which they do by using powers granted to them. I don't see how you go from that to justifying his actions - is there any evidence that there was a public order offence being committed? If he felt that one was going to arise, he could simple have asked they guy to leave. Deleting the photos/video seems to serve no purpose other than to satisfy his desire to do the "right" (as opposed to legal) thing.

And where are the powers that give the police the right to seize and destroy personal property if no crime has been committed? A confiscation order under the Proceeds of Crime Act requires a court conviction and a confiscation order - not the whim of a bobby on the beat.

The legality of deleting the video is a different question but as the scrote obviously didn't have any common decency (press photographers would have legitimate cause to capture events)
It's not a question. It's very clear. It was illegal.
Lacking common decency isn't an offence, and even if it was, the correct cause of action would have been to use the powers given to him, not those he imagined (or wished) himself to have.

There's law then there's justice.
Sounds worringly like something a vigilante mob would say.
 
swanseamale47 said:
And where the law is?.
The issue isn't that it was bad taste to photograph the scene, you have to remember were are a multicultural society, you can't assign your values to other people. For me the issue is that a "trained" police office let his emotions get in the way of the law, they above all else have to take the law seriously, and not make it up as they feel like, thats the goverment (elected by us) is job.
Franky if a simple RTC has that much impact on an office I can't help wondering if he's in the right job. I have seen and delt with some terrible incidents during my life, none made me loose control.


This is where your logic falls flat on it's face.

Do you honestly think dealing with a fatal rti is Simple????!!!
 
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But this incident wasnt hard news really.

Fair enough something newsworthy with massive public interest, such as the Diana crash, <snip> these are the only justifiable events where one might understand putting a videophone into a dying persons face, but not this incident.
So close-up video of someone dying in an RTA is OK as long as they're famous? How famous do they need to be? Should they phone round a few TV stations to gauge interest before they start filming?
 
We have no idea why this guy was filming or who if anyone he was filming for. We know nothing aboout him whatsoever. The only thing we know about his actions is that they were NOT against the law.

The policemans actions were however against the law. He dealt with this in entirely the wrong way and destroyed evidence in the process.

I find it worrying that so many people are defending him. I'm not saying that I approve of the filming - but I don't know anything about it - and neither does anyone else - but we do know about the policeman's actions - and they were wrong.
 
After reading all the comments on here and also reading the daily mail's article, it is only one person who is saying that the police officer actually deleted the footage! This hasn't actually been confirmed (or denied)
At the end of the day whether it was deleted or not, the guy trying to film this horrific accident was filming the death of a 12 year old girl. That is the most appalling part.
 
Accordiing to an eye witness -Michelle Lunney.....


Michelle Lunney, 44, who lives nearby, said: ‘The police told us she was late for a dance class and her mum was stuck in traffic, so she got out to run down the hill to her class and was hit.
‘I heard screaming, I thought it was her but it was her mother, she was absolutely hysterical. The most distressing thing was that a man tried to film it – the accident happened and he’s trying to film under the bus.

It seems to be pointless trying to explain to some of you that this officer needed to prioritise his actions, and the girl under the bus clearly took precedence over the guy with the mobile phone. For all we know he was the only officer on the scene - it's a bit difficult to arrest someone who may well turn stroppy while dealing with a fatal road accident! Some of you need to address the practicalities of the situation.

The officer did what he thought was most expedient at the time. It's open of course for this 'photographer' to complain but I bet he hasn't - and wont.
 
I think we're confusing 2 different acts here.

The Policeman was wrong to do what he did - fact in law.

The little scrote was very, very wrong in doing what he did. Not legally, but morally by most peoples standards.

The policeman should have pointed out to the scrote the error of his ways.. in whatever legal fashion he deemed suitable, as I would have done.

It's not however IMHO for people to carry out illegal acts if they find the actions of someone else immoral.

That's not a recipe for a civilised society.


Very succinctly put.
 
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