November 16, 2007 12:47 PM PST
Police Blotter: Can a cell phone camera intimidate a witness?
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What: Massachusetts defendant acts like he's taking a photograph of an undercover officer with a cell phone camera.
When: Massachusetts appeals court rules on November 15.
Outcome: Defendant is found guilty of additional criminal offense of witness intimidation.
What happened, according to court documents and other sources: On December 1, 2004, David Casiano was on trial, facing criminal charges relating to drug possession, when he noticed that an undercover police officer was present to testify against him. With camera-equipped cell phone in hand, Casiano exited the court room and acted as if he was taking photographs of the undercover officer and other police officers who were in the hallway outside.
Those officers complained to the judge, who ordered that the phone be confiscated. Casiano was reported saying, after his phone was seized: "What do you think I am...stupid? I already e-mailed the pictures to my house before you took the phone."
A court officer who was asked to inspect the cell phone could not find any photographs of either the undercover officer or any of the other police officers, and couldn't even determine whether the phone was capable of sending e-mail messages.
That led Casiano, 37, to be additionally charged with witness intimidation. (A local news report says he pleaded guilty to and went to jail for trespassing charges related to his original drug charges. Court records say the jury returned a not-guilty verdict on the original drug charge.)
During his subsequent trial on the witness intimidation charge, Casiano essentially invoked the I-was-just-kidding defense. He produced an affidavit from T-Mobile saying his cell phone wasn't even operational on the day of the incident. But the judge rejected it, saying the affidavit was not relevant, apparently on grounds that the threat of a photograph was what mattered. Casiano was found guilty, and he also lost on appeal.
This raises the obvious question: Under what circumstances should defendants--or members of the news media, for that matter--be able to publish photographs of undercover police officers or police informants? And when can merely taking a photograph constitute "intimidation?"
Police have already been alarmed at Web sites like Who's A Rat, which collect reports of alleged police informants and make them available publicly. Boston-area disc jockey Sean Bucci launched Who's A Rat when he was facing his own marijuana charges, and The Boston Globe reported that it outed at least one paid informant for the FBI in Boston.
But because the First Amendment's guarantee of freedom of expression likely protects such Web sites, Who's A Rat remains online.
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Police Blotter,
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Perhaps your the one who needs to be whacked.
Fake picture = intent to emulate itimidation
point it out. Unless you're just pontificating...
Reading the story, I found the judges ruling to be more than prudent. There is no freedom of the press issue here at all.
Unfortunately for TV networks, most people now know you guys in the corporate TV news media tend to always put "maintaining good relations" with the police/government ahead of informing your audience, the bill of rights, or the truth itself.
as a hallway, how could this hold water? Hallways are fair game.
If there was an undercover he/she should NOT have been
exposed publicly. They can in most cases use a side entrance to
shield their face from public view.
It would be, in my opinion, the same as complaining about
somebody taking your picture in public space and saying it is a
threat to you. Sorry, if you don't want your picture taken cover
up your face or do something to disguise yourself. Wear a
Groucho Marx pair of glasses, put on fake facial markings (scars,
warts) so you are not spotted the same as "normal".
If anything LEO's should not be intimidated, they know how to
hold their own.
and the officer. The defendant intimidated the officer
purposefully in hopes of preventing him from testifying. The
officer's location is irrelevant. In fact, the defendant's location is
irrelevant. Intent is clear here. No mind reading required.
Consider two close friends joking around and one puts his finger
to his head and pretends to shoot himself jokingly. The exact
same gesture made to a total stranger could be intimidating,
depending on the intent.
It's not so cut and dry... the reason the judicial system exists is
to draw the lines the laws are intended to draw.
All you "our rights are being stripped away" need to hush. Your rights are still there, however our rights are not ever-extending. For instance, your right to freedom of speech does not allow you to threaten anyone with bodily harm. You can tell a someone "I hate you!" but the moment you utter "I'm going to kill you!" it becomes verbal battery with intent. Seriously, the people who cry out that we are losing our rights usually are the people who do not understand our rights at all.
I always presumed "thought crime" was the stuff of fiction.
Guess not.