2014
DOI: 10.1177/1741659014531424
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Staring Down the State: Police Power, Visual Economies, and the “War on Cameras”

Abstract: This paper considers how the politics of security and order are also a politics of aesthetics encompassing practical struggles over the authority and regulation of ways of looking and knowing. To do this, the paper considers the visual economies of police power in the United States by engaging what has been called the "war on cameras", or the police crackdown on citizen photographers who "shoot back" or "stare down" police. Despite US law generally endorsing the right for citizens to film or photograph on-duty… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…This has included confiscating or breaking cameras, trying to bluff or intimidate bystanders to get them to stop recording, or pressuring citizens to surrender their cameras (Potere, 2012;Wall and Linnemann, 2014). Some officers at public protests, and wearing opaque face shields, remove their nametags and place black tape over their badge numbers to ensure they cannot be personally identified on film.…”
Section: Camera Shymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This has included confiscating or breaking cameras, trying to bluff or intimidate bystanders to get them to stop recording, or pressuring citizens to surrender their cameras (Potere, 2012;Wall and Linnemann, 2014). Some officers at public protests, and wearing opaque face shields, remove their nametags and place black tape over their badge numbers to ensure they cannot be personally identified on film.…”
Section: Camera Shymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work on the relationship between police officers and citizens with cellphone cameras tends to portray police and cameras as being in an inevitably conflictual relationship. Such research focuses on notable instances where officers have confiscated or even destroyed cameras (Wall and Linnemann, 2014). Accordingly, Stephanie Simon (2012) describes the post-9/11 security environment as involving a police coordinated "war on photography".…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Destruction: If they confiscate cameras, some police will also delete any footage that was previously recorded and/or destroy cameras (Wall and Linnemann 2014). A recent example saw a South Florida police officer confiscating a camera and then deleting footage recorded by Juan Santana, who had recorded an Officer Sentamanat aggressively stopping-and-frisking an 18-year-old male.…”
Section: The Police's Counter-sousveillancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Though the legality of such confiscation is questionable, police officers sometimes claim that it is acceptable if police believe that some footage will be a vital piece of evidence in the investigation of a criminal offence. If photographers refuse, police officers have been known to seize cameras from photographers (Wall and Linnemann 2014). Crucially, the confiscation of cameras also means that police officers can prevent footage about a given incident from being accessed by the public.…”
Section: The Police's Counter-sousveillancementioning
confidence: 99%
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