jacksparrow I consider myself a law abiding citizen and I must say your comments scare me. As far as I was aware the police are there to uphold the law of the land not give there interpretation of it.
"Photographing the police while threatening to complain about them just because you are not happy with their course of action = unacceptable"
I think I have every right to complain about the police course of action just because I am doing something they don't like although perfectly legal.
Lets be honest the main reason things have been done and apologise issued by the police, is because citizens (photographers) have had actual evidence of the police acting against the citizen just because the police don't like what they are doing.
We can perhaps see now why a lot of people are losing faith in our police "service"
I can't reply to all the comments here otherwise I'd be here all night. Munch seems the most genuinely concerned and has posted one of the more reasoned responses so I will talk about this.
I was, in case you missed it, talking about Breach of the Peace in Scots Law (very important because it differs greatly as PhotoPlod pointed out) to the law in E+W where I guess a lot of the replies have come from. In this jurisdiction any action which a person percieves to be designed to cause annoyance is potentially a breach of the peace. If reported, which a lot of unusual scenarios are, it is for the PF (our version of the CPS) to decide if a prosecution is merited and then for the court to decide whether the particular set of circumstances meet the criteria to convict on that charge.
Since there are over 8000 officers in the force in question here, and about 10000 constables (who generally are first responders to incidents and on patrol) in Scotland, it is naive for anyone to think that any situation which is potentially a BOP would not be dealt with in different ways. People (particularly here for some reason) seem to forget that police officers are all human beings and are from many diverse backgrounds, from bus drivers to steel workers, to architects. Everyone has different ways of dealing with the public and inevitibly with so many different people doing the job, some will have differing views of what is or is not enough of a public nuisance or disorderly conduct that merits a person to be charged with Breach of the Peace.
As far as I am aware there is no national guidance issued to police (certainly in Scotland) on the legalities or acceptability (or otherwise) of photographing the police. I suspect any such guidance would be in conflict with my personal beliefs (as posted in my first post earlier) which are not based on my 8 years as a cop but what I would or would not do in my 23 years before I was a cop. If the police were called to my house or a friend's house I would not start photographing them for no reason, just because I could. Nor would I start whistling The Bill theme tune or making "oink oink" noises, just because I could.
Munch, you questioned my personal opinion that I think it's unacceptable standard of behaviour to start pointing a camera into a cop's face and threaten to complain about them because you are not happy with their course of action. As I said, again that is not something I think is right. Complain, by all means. Note a shoulder number, by all means. But doing something which you know is going to aggravate most cops, with the intention of aggravating them is unneccessary. As is indicating you're going to complain. It's a bit of attention seeking, or even dare I say trying to provoke a reaction. If you're going to complain, why make a song and dance about it? Just go and do it.
I note you (and everyone else for that matter) also omitted to mention or credit me for my opinion that photographing any wrongdoing by the police is perfectly acceptable in my book. Is that because that does not sit well with the particular image of the police service you and others are trying to paint and spread in forums like this?
I am sorry that there is a clear distrust between law abiding citizens like yourself and others here. I have put my neck on the chopping block here while actually trying to break down some barriers and help people understand why police act in a certain way or say certain things. I have offered advice on what to do if the police stop you photographing, which I know for a fact will stop anyone getting into trouble - see my last line of my first post.
I don't want there to be an anti-police attitude amongst the photography community. It exists in the underclass to an extent most people do not realise in this country. The last thing the police need is decent reasonable minded people holding a grudge against them over a misguided perception of opression they picked up on a forum like this. The anti-police attitudes seem to be dragging on from the old Section 44 confusion of what was or was not acceptable in terms of building/location photography, which I believe has now been resolved with guidance issued by the Met (it was never a great issue North of the border to be honest).
I just hope that the reasonable minded people of TP forum can understand that when you are in a job where you can quite easily be targeted by criminals you generally want to live a quiet, private life. That does, in a way, set police officers apart from Joe Public who is far less likely to be targeted. The mindset that goes along with the job is something that it would take far longer than I have already written to understand. If you know any, ask a cop's husband or wife what it's like, what effect little things like that have on them, the worry it can cause. My wife was stressed out her nut when photos of me arresting someone during a SDL/UAF demo and counter demo appeared on Flickr.
As I said, I mean no offence to those who think I am the stereotyped heavy handed cop. I merely tried to explain (with the Scottish perspective) how alarming/annoying actions can be perceived, bearing in mind how many individuals there are carrying out the same job. Mistakes will be made and opinions will always differ. Some kind of legislation or code of understanding between cops and photographers would definitely help. Until then I fear cops and photographers may well be singing from different hymn sheets.
I don't intend to post again in this thread so I hope I've covered everything and I hope I might have just done enough to help some folk see things in a different light.
Just for Byker... remember Wideo is pronounced Wide-O not rhyming with video, and Neddier just means chavvier
