| Profiling the profilers |
| Bulletin | |||||||||||||||
| By Kathlyn Stone | |||||||||||||||
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Profiling the profilers First, at a little before 3 p.m. my teenage daughter and I were heading for the RippleEffect event at the State Capitol grounds to hear Michael Franti, a musician-activist we both admire. After we crossed Constitution Avenue a volunteer observer with the National Lawyers Guild pointed out to me that a state trooper took our picture as we crossed the street, and that he was taking pictures of every person that entered the venue from the same direction. Was he taking pictures to use against us in the future, track us, or intimidate us? Was it her peace buttons or my camera bag? Were we guilty by association? I have a camera myself and I took a photo of him, camera in hand. I can see his name clearly on his shirt and will, as suggested by the NLG volunteer, be sending the photos to both the ACLU and the NLG. I'll pursue what the state intends to do with all the photos of all those people. Later, down at Mear's Park for the start of the Poor People's March, I witnessed the disturbing profiling of a youth on a bike who had been yanked to the curb by a group of police officers on bikes. He was forced to his knees, placed in white plastic handcuffs, while police riffled through his backpack even though he said, "I do not consent." But many jumpy journalists and legal observers were gathered with the marchers, and thanks to two alert citizens who sounded the alarm of an arrest in progress, the police were quickly facing the lenses of 20-30 photographers, videographers and camera phone guerillas. Caught red-handed without a cause to arrest other than he didn't "look right," the officers struggled with the cuffs for a few minutes as the crowd of observers grew and questions were fired amid the click-click-click of shutters and video cameras silently took in the scene. Suddenly, one of the police officers standing over the young man called out, "Do you have any box cutters?" to another posse of cops on bikes that had arrived with the influx. The terrified youth was soon released and quietly left the area.
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