Graham Mantle
27 August 2009

IPNAT-Portrait-GM.JPG

In 1961, Eisenhower warned of the “unwarranted influence” of the “military industrial complex”. He and Roosevelt believed fear was dangerous.
Thomas Jefferson said, “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance”. We are deprived of that vigilance if we cannot show a record.
If we must “prove”…”reasonable excuse” (s76), that presumption of guilt is a police state.
Roosevelt remarked, “When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on”.
With many ropes and many knots, we might help each other to hang on. Good luck to all.

Graham Mantle is a (tourist) Photographer, Not a Terrorist

Richard Budd
25 August 2009

p-not-t.jpg

Whilst it’s nice being a part of the digital era, I always love taking out the Polaroid camera for that low saturation blurred vintage look! Keep shooting and keep being creative, capture the moment with whatever you have to hand!

Richard Budd is a Photographer, Not a Terrorist.

Franck Julien
24 August 2009

not a terroros.jpg

I’m advertiser and photographer Based at Nîmes, France (south with warm & good wine). I love my jobs, it’s all my life.

Franck Julien is a Photographer, Not a Terrorist.

Tim Myers
24 August 2009

_MG_5585.jpg

Big camera, big lens = terrorist. I walk around emblazoned with logos telling people how to get in touch with me, I hand them cards with my contact details on, yet I’m still regularly told that “you can’t take pictures ‘ere mate, I’ll call the police if you don’t stop it”

Tim Myers is a Photographer, not a Terrorist

Carlos E. Ovalle
22 August 2009

not a terrorist.JPG

In Chile we also have some paranoid at all this issue.
Stop harassing photographers, ALL OVER THE WORLD!
I AM A PHOTOGRAPHER, NOT A TERRORIST!

Carlos E. Ovalle is a Photographer, Not a Terrorist

Oliver Geils
22 August 2009

_MG_0132.jpg

I have made this portrait in an effort to help the cause and protest against the ever tightening restrictions being imposed upon photographers nation wide.
I study Documentary Photography at Newport University, and am becoming increasingly worried about the measures the police are taking in order to maintain a hold over the public and strip photographers of one of the most candid forms of the medium.

Oliver Geils is a Photographer, Not a Terrorist

Jadikan
22 August 2009

jadikan-LP - not a terrorist.jpg

SOOC
200s exposure time …

Jadikan is A Photographer, Not a Terrorist

We may have caused a bit of a stir…
21 August 2009

Home Office issues new advice on Photography and Terrorism Laws

  • Brings Home Office in to line with NPIA and Met advice
  • New guidance for use of s76 on journalists and tourists

home-office-screen

On Tuesday afternoon the Home Office sent out advice to all the Chief Police Officers in the UK about the use of Terrorism laws on photographers, they say:

This circular has been produced to clarify counter-terrorism legislation in relation to photography in a public place. Concerns have been raised that sections of the Terrorism Act 2000 are being used to stop people taking photographs – whether this is photographs of buildings or people – and that cameras are being confiscated during such searches.

Home Office Circular 012 / 2009

It then goes on to clarify police powers under sections 43 and 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 and is broadly in line with the National Police Improvement Agency (NPIA) and Met Police advice issued earlier this year. However, it then comes to give new advice on s58A – more commonly known as s76 – which makes it an offence to photograph a police officer or member of the armed forces:

An officer making an arrest [under section 76] must reasonably suspect that the information is of a kind likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism.  An example might be gathering information about the person’s house, car, routes to work and other movements. [...]

It is a statutory defence for a person to prove that they had a reasonable excuse for eliciting, publishing or communicating the relevant information [Under s76]

Important: Legitimate journalistic activity (such as covering a demonstration for a newspaper) is likely to constitute such an excuse. Similarly an innocent tourist or other sight-seer taking a photograph of a police officer is likely to have a reasonable excuse.

(Emphasis theirs) Home Office Circular 012 / 2009

Leaving aside the whole issue of who or what the police deem to be ‘legitimate journalistic activity’ something which Commander Broadhurst – Head of Public Order at the Met – failed to grasp earlier this year at the NUJ Photographers Conference. This new advice does nothing for the thousands of amateur and professional wildlife, landscape, architectural or street photographers who are routinely harassed by police whilst taking photographs.

We have seen a letter from the new Policing minister, David Hanson, sent to the National Union of Journalists yesterday who this new advice seems to be in response to. In the closing paragraph of his letter he says:

I believe this circular removes once and for all any suggestion that the new offence can be used to prosecute innocent photographers such as responsible journalists, simply because they are taking a photograph of a police officer. I am enclosing a copy of the circular for your reference.

Letter to Jeremy Dear, General Secretary, NUJ – David Hanson, Minister for Policing

2009-03-21_W080060

Photographer Justin Tallis is questioned by Bedfordshire police about photographing police officers on a demonstration. Image: Jonathan Warren

We will be watching carefully how this new advice is adopted as we know of at least two occasions where s76 has been threatened against press photographers in public order situations.

The new advice also ignores Special Procedure Material under PACE which gives journalistic material a higher level of protection from seizure by police (The police have to go to a county-court judge and explain why they need it) After protests by the National Union of Journalists the Met changed their advice to include the caveat that when searching someone who identified themselves as a journalist that ‘Officers should exercise caution before viewing images as images acquired or created for the purposes of journalism may constitute journalistic material and should not be viewed without a Court Order.

We did contact the Home Office to ask why their advice did not include Special Procedure Material but they did not respond.

Marc Vallée has published the letter from the Home Office minister in full on his blog.

Marty Hirst
21 August 2009

Marty Hirst

I’m a truck-driving photographer and not a terrorist, not even part-time, or even at weekends, so DON’T KEEP ASKING!!

(I was actually asked, out the window of a patrol-car in S.London a few weeks back “not a terrorist are you?”)

Marty Hirst is a Photographer, Not a Terrorist

Dermot Carlin
21 August 2009

Dermot Carlin

Forty something self taught photographer, love my job, don’t love being made to feel like a criminal whilst doing my job.

Dermot Carlin is a Photographer, Not a Terrorist.