Judge: Baton Rouge Violated the First Amendment by Trying To Imprison a Professor for Sharing Body Camera Footage
It was the city that put the footage in the public record in the first place.

The city of Baton Rouge tried to throw a law professor in prison after he shared publicly available body camera footage showing police officers strip-searching a minor in public. On Friday, a federal judge ruled that this violated the First Amendment.
That footage, originally shared with Reason, was captured at a 2020 traffic stop. Baton Rouge Police Department (BRPD) officers cuffed 23-year-old Clarence Green and his 16-year-old brother, pulling down their pants on the sidewalk to look for drugs. Officer Troy Lawrence Jr. and then–Sgt. Ken Camallo subsequently went to the family's home and searched it, weapons drawn, without a warrant.
When the story sparked considerable outrage, the government zeroed in on Thomas Frampton, the attorney who represented the Greens and disseminated the clips, which were already a part of the public record. During a May press conference convened to address the video, East Baton Rouge Parish Attorney Anderson "Andy" Dotson III notified Frampton that the government would seek to hold him in contempt of court, which carried up to six months in the East Baton Rouge Parish Prison.
"In measuring 'the significance of [Frampton's] alleged criminal activity', the Court finds under the circumstances of this case, there was no criminal activity," writes Judge John W. deGravelles in a 92-page opinion published Friday. "Frampton released a Video that was in the public domain, belonged to his clients, and he released it on the instructions and with the knowledge of his clients."
The footage of Camallo's warrantless home entry might be an even bigger headache for the BRPD that the public strip-search. This was his third such search in under three years. He has since been demoted, but he's still with the department.
"BRPD officers' contempt for the constitutional rights of everyday Baton Rouge citizens, like the Green Family, is jaw-dropping," Frampton declared in a public statement. "But then you see how the lawyers who defend and enable these officers act, and it makes a lot more sense. Sadly, it's the taxpayers who will end up paying for their misdeeds."
Indeed, the Green family reached a $35,000 settlement with the city after Clarence spent five months in jail. The government moved to dismiss its case against him, and a federal judge agreed—but not without first benchslapping the state for actions that could be criminal.
"Such an intrusion, in abject violation of the protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which protects citizens against unwarranted governmental intrusions in their homes, may justifiably be considered to be a trespass subject to prosecution under" Louisiana law, wrote Judge Brian A. Jackson of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana.
The city of Baton Rouge insisted that it was Frampton who violated the law, by disseminating the video. But it was the city that put that footage into the public record in the first place.
DeGravelles thinks this was never really about prosecuting someone for breaching the law. Instead, he says, it was about revenge and skirting accountability. "The record is replete with evidence," he writed, "that the City/Parish would not have pursued this matter in the absence of its bad faith motive to retaliate."
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Cops are above the law?!?! Who knew?!?! 95% of the commenters here will be outraged, and I am glad for that much...
Now, if only the cops had been threatened to be killed by their own guns, by Trumpanzees gone apeshit on 6 Jan 2021, 95% of the commenters here would be crying and moaning for Saint Ashli Babbitt to be PROTECTING us from the cops and the Deep State, by Exerting Her Heavenly Protections (for us Good White non-socialist folks) from Demon-Crap vote-stealing WITCHES!!! PROTECT us ALL, Saint Babbitt, from Your Elevated Perch, Up There, in the Great Beyond the Beyond!!! PLEASE?!?!?!?
https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/commentary/2022/01/09/heres-where-christian-nationalism-comes-from-and-what-it-gets-wrong/
Here’s where Christian nationalism comes from, and what it gets wrong
It was religious fervor that drove the Jan. 6 mob
https://www.jpost.com/international/kill-him-with-his-own-gun-dc-cop-talks-about-the-riot-655709
‘Kill him with his own gun’ – DC cop talks about Capitol riot
DC Police officer Michael Fanone: I had a choice to make: Use deadly force, which would likely result with the mob ending his life, or trying something else.
“Pro-law-and-order” Trumpturds take the side of trumpanzees going apeshit, making cops beg for their lives! For trying to defend democracy against mobocracy! Can you slime-wads sink ANY lower?!?!
Trumpanzees... How cruel and hurtful! I'm going to tell all my friends I was the one who made that up, but Rocket J. Steal squirreled it from me. It's not fair!
#Trumpanzees for asset forfeiture!
Democrats and Republicans alike entice hired thugs to shake down unarmed minority members for dope for which their own pathetic laws jack up the prices. Then when the economy comes crashing down and the bank takes yachts from rednecks instead of confiscating hovels from brown folks. Causality says: superstitious laws that make a crime of production and trade, rather than violence, wreck the economy!
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“he writed”! How did this get past KMW?
Dang, you beat me to it. I thought writers would have, you know, a familiarity with correct grammar. Or at least use the spell check/grammar check available on most word processors.
They hit 1A with a baton until it turned rouge.
Underrated comment.
Cases like this demonstrate both what we’re doing right and wrong.
Video and audio recordings of our experiences, in this case body cam footage, are both necessary and effective at demonstrating irrefutable truth. Doing so needs to be an inalienable right.
Demonstrating truth doesn’t guarantee justice without criminalizing and prosecuting lying.
All involved in the strip search and subsequent home invasion need to be jailed. Federal prosecutors need to get off of their corrupt rear ends and prosecute the criminals for civil rights violations. Lotsa luck with that.
PROTECT ALL whistleblowers!
Forget it, Billy. It's Louisianatown.
Why on earth did it take the judge 92 pages to decide what a 12 year old could write in 3 pages or less?
Pay the twelve year old by the page and see how that equation chcnges. Make him run for the position of writing that stuff in a public election and see a bit deeper into the background explanation. Ply him wiht rum and see even further into the mystery.
Baton Rouge is a Purple city, with a Democratic mayor, and a slightly (7-5) Republican city counsel.
This gaggle of dirt coppers NEED to be brought up on charges for violating their rights to privacy, to be "secure in their persons, papers, houses, and effects", then stomp on their ingrown toenails for falsely ccusing and arresting and prosecuting the guy who redistributed the publically availble and owned bodycam footage. Then go after them for unlawfully detaining (kidnapping the guy when they arrested and charged him. False imprisoinment, into the bargain. NOW let's see who hollers for their "rights".....
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