The Supreme Court Declines To Determine if You Have a First Amendment Right To Film the Police
Denver cops received qualified immunity after performing a warrantless search of a man’s tablet and trying to delete a video he took of them beating a suspect.

The Supreme Court has just refused to hear a case at the nexus of police abuse and the First Amendment, declining to consider a petition from a man who says his free speech rights were violated when a group of cops searched his tablet without a warrant and attempted to delete a video he took of them beating a suspect.
Officers with the Denver Police Department (DPD) cornered Levi Frasier in the summer of 2014 after they noticed he had recorded an altercation moments prior. The video showed a cop punching a suspect in the face six times while executing an arrest over an alleged drug deal—the man had a sock in his mouth that the cops thought was contraband—and it captured a different officer throwing a woman to the ground by her ankle when she approached the scene screaming. Upon noticing Frasier, DPD Officer Russell Bothwell shouted "Camera!" and the group proceeded to harass him for the footage. Frasier says the police implied they would jail him if he refused to produce the clip. "Well, we could do this the easy way or we could do this the hard way," Officer Christopher L. Evans reportedly said, pointing to his squad car. Despite Frasier's protestations, the police then confiscated the tablet and went through it without the owner's permission.
Those officers were given qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that allows a slew of state actors to infringe on your rights if the way they went about doing so has not specifically been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court or the same federal circuit. It's a granular standard that has seen government officials get off for assaulting and arresting a man for standing outside of his own home, for shooting and killing a man who had been sleeping in his car, for beating a man after pulling him over for broken lights, for leaving an innocent man's home in ruins after conducting a SWAT raid on the wrong house, and for stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars. Without a prior ruling with identical facts, the victims in the above scenarios were not allowed to state their claims before a jury.
That standard is particularly egregious here, because the DPD enacted a policy in 2007 informing officers that the public has a constitutional right to film them on duty. But that wasn't good enough, according to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, which ruled in March that the only permissible avenue for overcoming qualified immunity is to find that perfect court precedent.
"Judicial decisions are the only valid interpretive source of the content of clearly established law; whatever training the officers received concerning the First Amendment was irrelevant to the clearly-established-law inquiry," wrote Judge Jerome A. Holmes of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit. With the high court's rejection today, that ruling will remain intact.
The rationale for qualified immunity is that officials should be free from vacuous lawsuits and thus deserve to be put "on notice" as to what is and is not constitutional behavior. From the 10th Circuit's opinion, we are to deduce that obscure court precedents are more valuable at accomplishing that end than a department's own stated policies, even though one would expect most government employees to be more familiar with the latter than the former.
Those training guidelines will now "somewhat lose their force," says Anya Bidwell, an attorney at the Institute for Justice, a public interest firm. Cops have less reason to follow department policies if they know the federal courts will decline to hold them accountable for breaking those very rules. In shielding a group of rogue government employees, the court inadvertently weakened the public's First Amendment rights.
"What's particularly stunning here is that the people who wrote the training were able to correctly synthesize the law and conclude that the officers' actions violated [a] constitutional right," says Ari Cohn, free speech counsel at TechFreedom, an advocacy group focused on the intersection of technology and the First Amendment. "To rule that qualified immunity protects them, even though the department correctly pieced together the clearly established law to train them that such conduct is unlawful, simply because a court hadn't ruled on that particular fact pattern, is extreme judicial hubris."
The 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, and 11th Circuits have all acknowledged a First Amendment right to film the police. Had those officers misbehaved in a location subject to one of those federal circuit courts, they would not have been so lucky.
And while the 10th Circuit acknowledged that DPD training invoked a constitutional right to film the police, the court danced around coming to any conclusion on that subject. "We do not consider, nor opine on, whether Mr. Frasier actually had a First Amendment right to record the police performing their official duties in public spaces," Holmes wrote, leaving officers in that jurisdiction free to violate the public's rights in the same way again without fear of recourse.
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SCOTUS fucks over the citizens. Film at elev…what? We have no film.
I don’t know how this is really in question. How does anyone, cop or not, have a reasonable expectation of privacy in public?
this.
Seriously I don’t know why more people haven’t tried this, I work two shifts, 2 hours in the day and 2 in the evening…FhOL And i get surly a check of $12600 what’s awesome is I m working from home so I get more time with my kids.
Try it, you won’t regret it........CASHAPP1
Sounds interesting. Do you shave your pubes before your webcam show, or flash the bush?
The union contract?
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Starting with FDRs tame Court, SCOTUS has been ever more consistently abdicating it's responsibility.
Changing our government from an island of government in a sea of individual rights to an island of individual rights in a sea of government power; ruling that the government is Sovereign on the basis of "governments have always been sovereign and they need to be"; resurrecting the "right of sovereign immunity" for the King the King's minions; pretending that every S.Ct. precedent prior to FDR has disappeared...
It's all of a piece and all comes from standing the constitution on it's head.
The job of judges is to defend the government from the people.
"When you see that trading is done, not by consent, but by compulsion–when you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing–when you see that money is flowing to those who deal, not in goods, but in favors–when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when you see corruption being rewarded and honesty becoming a self-sacrifice–you may know that your society is doomed." - Ayn Rand
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"In shielding a group of rogue government employees, the court inadvertently weakened the public's First Amendment rights."
Inadvertently?
Looked pretty danged deliberate to me! Courts are pro-cop because the courts rely on cops to arrest suspects and produce evidence for prosecutors to take to trial. If you want to see a true quid pro quo, look at the three-way quid-pro-quo that exists between cops, prosecutors, judges.
These judges that made up and now allow this truly disgusting doctrine to exist have to be doing this on purpose. It will be very ironic when one of their friends or family gets victimized by uniformed thugs and nothing short of a modern day minuteman can do anything about it.
In the court biz one learns to keep a straight face when the judge acts like judges and prosecutors, trial attorneys and cops do not draw pay in consecutively-numbered checks.
I thought this issue was long settled.
Always stream to the cloud.
"The Supreme Court Declines To Determine if You Have a First Amendment Right To Film the Police"
Correct headline:
"Supreme Court determines you have no first amendment rights."
We told you this would happen when no one defended the second amendment.
All the rest are meaningless if you don't have the 2nd to protect all the others! That's the true meaning of the 2nd A! To throw off a despotic regime once the rights of the people are no longer respected. As far as I'm concerned, that ship sailed long time ago!
The supreme already made the 2nd a two tiered system divorced from its original intent.
Now if we want to fight we'll have to do it like the goat herders and jungle peasants did.
La Suprema definitely refused "to see" forcing men at gunpoint into foreign poison gas trenches or minefields as anything like "involuntary servitude." What's next? Long Dong, Grand Goblin and Lebensborn Mom get to rule that enticing armed thugs to chase pregnant girls from innertube to innertube across the Canadian, Pecos, Sabine or Red River for forced labor is nothing like "slavery or involuntary servitude." Like Harriet observed: "The catching business, we beg to remind them, is rising to the dignity of a lawful and patriotic profession."
This bullshit could have been sorted out years ago if the courts had just said, "Any time Qualified Immunity is granted to police officers in a case, we shall judge the constitutionality of the case then and there." The big problem is that the court is having it both ways- they want to say there is no precedent to judge, and then refuse to provide a precedent for the future. That is absurd.
Exactly! The courts never intended to rein in abusive police officers! That puts a blotch on the courts' faces because they all rely on cops to arrest suspects and gather evidence the prosecutor can use in court to prosecute!
Is Catch-22 absurd?
It's still not a Catch-22, which is self-referential, i.e., having enough awareness to know that you are mentally unfit is proof you are mentally fit.
The courts are specifically declining to state whether the behavior in question is a violation when ruling that there is no precedent and keeping precedent from being set. We know they can, because they have done so in specific instances (which should count as a precedent, but for some reason does not). It's more akin to cockblocking the Constitution.
That being said, it is absurd in the same way Catch-22 was absurd.
You can thank Safford v Redding for that.
When all participants of a “system” are feeding from the same nose-bag, free from competition — and are allowed (by your neighbors and friends — hopefully not you) to
• Make the laws,
• Enforce the laws,
• Prosecute the laws,
• Hire the prosecutors,
• License the “defense” attorneys,
• Pay the “judges”,
• Build the jails,
• Contract jails out to private entities,
• Employ and pay the wardens,
• Employ and pay the guards,
• Employ and pay the parole officers,
One can’t honestly call it a “justice” system. It’s a system of abject tyranny.
So evidence tampering charges coming to the officers next, right? /haha I kid..
And by the way, my home state has truly become the France of the United States- great to visit, but net exporter of some of the most toxic and nasty bullshit ever unleashed on a nation. From Columbine, to knocking down a house to get the perp allegedly inside, to gay cake baking, Colorado is really punching above its weight here.
It’s time to cleanse America of the leftist infestation. No one has a right to practice Marxism.
>> free speech rights were violated when a group of cops searched his tablet without a warrant and attempted to delete a video he took of them beating a suspect.
so were his 4A rights
"The 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, and 11th Circuits have all acknowledged a First Amendment right to film the police."
How . . . odd. What's with the even-numbered circuits?
Oddly enough, they want to even the playing field. Even if it looks odd.
It would be a complete tragedy if every time the police received QI for some utterly egregious bullshit like this, they got shot in the head.
Though I have to wonder if the courts would stop granting QI on complete and utter egregious bullshit, if only to save the cops' lives, were that come to pass.
But as I said, a massive tragedy. Really. It would be very sad.
It is simple.If the cops can film you in public, you can film the cops in public. You and the cops are both citizens covered by the same Constitution. Any ruling to the contrary is a violation of the Equal Protection Clause.
Lol... The scotus disagrees and they are supreme.
Disingenuous cowards unfit for their positions.
Logic and science readily yield the answers to unambiguous questions which require courage and commitment to discern.
SCOTUS obviously has neither.
Best Binion article yet. Reminds me of a definition of an honest official--one who stays bought. To this day no one has advanced a better explanation of why for the doctrine of "stare decisis" gets to override facts, evidence, valid inference, integrity, epistemology and reason.
When all participants of a “system” are feeding from the same nose-bag, free from competition — and are allowed (by your neighbors and friends — hopefully not you) to
• Make the laws,
• Enforce the laws,
• Prosecute the laws,
• Hire the prosecutors,
• License the “defense” attorneys,
• Pay the “judges”,
• Build the jails,
• Contract jails out to private entities,
• Employ and pay the wardens,
• Employ and pay the guards,
• Employ and pay the parole officers,
One can’t honestly call it a “justice” system. It’s a system of abject tyranny.
Read the US Constitution. It nowhere grant the US Supreme Court power to interpret it. It does however, specify who has that power. That is reserved for the States and the People,
So who says otherwise? Why it's that self-same US Supreme Court, in the greatest constitutional theft ever committed, in Marbury v. Madison. While an argument could be made that in this particular case, involving two DC-based Federal officials, the court might be an appropriate venue for deciding, it is so only because it may not be feasible to find another neutral party.
All the Federal officials were happy to get the extra power taken out of the hands of the people, and the Supreme Court pretty much lost all credibility at that point.
What is the "judicial power"? I'm convinced by Randy Barnett's view that it includes the power to interpret the constitution and strike down offending government actions.
I tend to be influenced more by James Madison when this question arises.
Here's what he said-
Federalist No. 49: Madison
"As the people are the only legitimate fountain of power, and it is from them that the constitutional charter, under which the several branches of government hold their power is derived, it seems strictly consonant to the republican theory to recur to the same original authority, not only whenever it may be necessary to enlarge, diminish, or new-model the powers of government, but also whenever one of the departments may commit encroachments on the chartered authorities of the others. The several departments being perfectly co-ordinate by the terms of their common commission, neither of them, it is evident, can pretend to an exclusive or superior right of settling the boundaries between their respective powers; and how are the encroachments or the stronger to be prevented, or the wrongs of the weaker to be redressed, without an appeal to the people themselves, who, as the grantors of the commission, can alone declare its true meaning, and enforce its observance?"
Do we know which justices did not want to hear this case?
I followed links to the release from the Supreme Court, and it seems like it just appears on a list of cases denied cert, without any dissents or other explanation. So, it could be that there is no way to find out.
Republican appointees are 6 of the 9 Justices, though, and it takes 4 Justices to vote to hear a case for it to be added to the term's docket. Both Thomas and Sotomayor have expressed skepticism of qualified immunity precedent in the past, so it is likely a question of why no more than one of their colleagues (out of 5 GOP nominees and 2 Democrat ones) is interested in addressing this ridiculousness.
This gives you a sense of what kind of judges Republicans and Democrats want in the federal courts.
hi...This standard is especially egregious in this case because the DPD implemented a policy in 2007 informing officers that the public has a constitutional right to film them while they are on duty. But that wasn't enough for the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, which ruled in March that the only way to overcome qualified immunity is to find that perfect court precedent. Sometimes, courts ban the Funny Wifi Names due to miss understanding and related to govt. forces.
Nice blog by reason.
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Hilary set the precedent, wipe the servers, destroy the computers. The police delete the video. Destruction of evidence is an acceptable practice when accused of a crime.
Qualified Immunity needs to end for every one including these judges who are protecting it.
Are the accused still Denver Police Officers? If they are, put the blame where it belongs. The Denver Police and the Government of the City of Denver. Policy stated that people ARE allowed to video the Police in the performance of their duties. They violated that policy. Plain and simple.
The more the court ignores blatant infringement of constitutional rights the more the police abuse those rights. Disgusting.
One of these days, possibly very soon, people that continually get fucked by the Goobermint and its blue goon squad might start taking matters into their own hands. Can't piss and moan when a badge gets taken out and hung from a tree over his abusing civilians and the film goes viral.
I gotta agree. We are in dangerous territory with this.
In this case they say training materials are not enough to put them on notice that they do not have this "QI" that the courts invented out of whole cloth... But prior cases have found that even the laws passed by the legislature and signed by the governor cannot overcome QI. If stealing a quarter million dollars does not count as something that they are on notice about, there is no "qualified" in qualified immunity.
This is something the other two branches will have to fix.
And that is not likely.
Do these cops also have Qualified Immunity for intentional destruction of material evidence (of them beating one man, which was filmed by a bystander)?! Is there no sufficiently specific precedent that destroying evidence is not allowed?!
One item always omitted from these articles decrying qualified immunity, the drug war or searches and seizures is that the judges and justices who keep signing off on letting the police and government abuse us are 99% Republican (including Trump) appointees.
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