With the advent of cellphones as a standard device carried by hundreds of millions daily, the ability of citizens to film police and politicians in public settings has increased accountability for those holding positions of public trust.
Unfortunately, a growing trend of judicial tyranny could curtail a person’s right to access their phone to suddenly film an event unfolding before them in a public setting.
First Amendment rights advocates argue that the right to film public events should never be abrogated, given the protections of the U.S. Constitution.
But with the judiciary having more statist judges in place, it’s become more challenging to protect these most basic rights.
In the federal Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in Missouri, a recent ruling has struck down the right to film public officials in a public setting. On the next page, learn how the dispute may have to head to the Supreme Court to get resolved.
SOROS AND NWO CREEP…….STOP THEM NOW!
Not until the Supreme Court says so and they won’t…until then it doesn’t matter…
Naaa
This will be Tossed out , But it proves How important the next SCOTUS Justice is !
What are they hiding????
THIS IS BULL C**P MUST BE A LIBERAL STORY.
So Killary can keep on killing
You can’t film them but you can shoot them,what a bunch of assholes
if true the police state has arrived stop obeying all laws just dont get caught…
When is this old hag going to hang it up?