Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry has signed legislation making it a crime to knowingly approach within 25 feet of a police officer while they are “engaged in law enforcement duties” after the officer has ordered the person to stay back.
Critics of a new Louisiana law, which makes it a crime to approach within 25 feet (7.6 meters) of a police officer under certain circumstances, fear that the measure could hinder the public’s ability to film officers — a tool that has increasingly been used to hold police accountable.
Under the law, anyone who is convicted of “knowingly or intentionally” approaching an officer, who is “lawfully engaged in the execution of his official duties,” and after being ordered to “stop approaching or retreat” faces up to a $500 fine, up to 60 days in jail or both. The law was signed by Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, Tuesday and goes into effect Aug. 1.
While the legislation’s language does not specifically mention filming, critics say that by default it would limit how close a person can be to observe police. Opponents have also gone further to question the law’s constitutionality, saying it could impede on a person’s First Amendment rights.
Whenever I see dumb laws like this being passed, I think about all the problems they aren’t fixing. Louisiana is damn-near last place on all of the quality of life indexes. It’s sad that they keep electing politicians who refuse to better their quality of life.
It doesn't help that it was a shitty election cycle. People didn't vote and are in shock that the republican won where turnout was 36% of registered voters because people assumed the jungle primary would cause a dem and repub to move forward when in fact, of that 36%, Landry won outright with 51%.
Im not saying he wouldn't have won anyways, but it would have been much closer if people would actually vote.
I can't wait for someone to try to justify fleeing the police with this law. "Officer, you were executing your official duties. I was trying to obey the law by staying 25 feet from you but you kept pursuing me!"
Guess I'll cross New Orleans off my list of possible vacation destinations. Not a big fan of voluntarily entering police states.
You mean all the people saying no one should bother voting because "both sides bad and it does nothing" might not have the US' best interests at heart??
Given that the courts already shutdown Arizona's attempt last year to keep people 8 feet away from a cop, I'm not sure arguing for 3 times the distance is going to stand.
Louisiana is going to waste a lot of money defending this law. The Supreme Court has been very consistent on filming cops is allowed. Also 25 feet is huge, that effectively closes sidewalks if a car is pulled over, and any two lane roads. The selective enforcement options are endless.
Nah. They just walk keep walking towards you. This law legalizes a behavior they already display called "bulldogging". They walk towards you attempting to intimidate you into walking away. If you can't be intimidated then they escalate until you are arrested for resisting arrest. This is just more smoke cover for cops to act like an occupying force.
I love the knowledge that if someone is breaking into my house, the cops will show up later to tell me nothing will be recovered and to hand me a piece of paper.
My friends sister lives in an area where you're never more than a minute away from a cop sitting somewhere looking to collect taxes give a ticket. She literally watched someone pull out of her driveway in her car and immediately called the cops. The car couldn't have been more than 1 block away and they said "sorry can't help you, call your insurance."
I drove to target and saw 6 cop cars and probably a dozen cops all holding on or standing near a guy with a bag who stole something...
They're fucking useless pet executioners, tax collectors, and defenders of obscene wealth.
They shoot people who point things at them. They'll simply say they "feared for their life” when someone tries to take a picture of them at a distance.
I don’t know where to begin with this but I’ll try.
For starters, you gonna go by everyone a 70-200 and a camera body to match?
Cell phone cameras have been THE best accountability device. And yes they’ve gotten great. But up close, wide shots are going to be far more useful (partially because it’s way more stable)
yeah. my remark was mostly flippant and sarcastic. The law should not exist but it is good technology has some options. Still its sad we have to hack around bad laws.
I have a 70-200 I use on a full frame body and it’s awesome. But my phone can zoom in too even if the quality will be way worse. There’s even some optical zoom to it since phones have multiple lenses these days.
Well, see the problem is now officers can yell at people to fuck off, and when they later argue in court that they were fat enough away all the cop has to say is "per my judgment they appeared to be within..." and regardless of how stupid they may have to pretend to be, they are protected. They now have legal cover to intimidate random members of the public.
From copilot:
"Yes, you're correct. The doctrine of qualified immunity does protect individual police officers from legal consequences in certain circumstances. It shields government officials, including law enforcement officers, from liability for civil damages as long as their conduct does not violate "clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known"².
This means that if a police officer, under a mistaken understanding of the law or a mistaken observation of facts, conducts an arrest or detention, they may be granted qualified immunity if they can show that they believed in good faith that their actions were lawful. The standard is whether a reasonable officer could have believed the arrest to be lawful, given the circumstances. This protection applies even if the officer's belief was mistaken, as long as the mistake is reasonable¹³.
However, qualified immunity is not absolute. If the law was clearly established at the time of the incident, such that a reasonable officer would understand that what they are doing violates that right, then qualified immunity would not protect them⁵. The application of this doctrine is complex and often depends on the specific facts of each case, as well as the jurisdiction in which the incident occurred. It's a topic of ongoing legal debate and has been subject to scrutiny and calls for reform¹³."
I'm sorry I stopped reading when you went to copilot for information that matters. You can always cite the numerous court cases saying qualified immunity is a bar for any civil suit that isn't an exact replica of a case where a police officer was successfully sued in the past. And SCOTUS ruled that difference can be as little as them walking instead of running. Effectively making it impossible to sue a police officer.
so it was the citizens who are being put in their place by militarized police, voting restrictions, lead in the water pipes, the underfunded and gutted education system, low minimum wage both state and federal, the pollution, healthcare access restrictions, etcetera that caused bad politicians to gain and hold power not anything else?
So as your car comes to a stop, check the car behind you or in front or the side. If it's a cop, you're fucked. They can just shoot you if you look at them with RBF resting bitch face.
Well, I guess that gives people an excuse to start pointing lasers at them (gotta accurately measure distance somehow). Also might be fun when those that are hard of hearing start trying to keep 25' back and can't hear the officer trying to ask them to stop.
I'm questioning what prompted this, but the law seems perfectly reasonable in any case.
25' is the length of my driveway. I can hear and see a normal conversation quite well at that distance, and I can't hear for shit. If you're closer than that and a cop tells you to back it up, why not?
Cops are mostly dealing with idiots. How close to a potentially volatile situation do you need to be? How close do you want to be? We can still clearly observe the situation at 25'.
Now if they make filming or speaking illegal, I'm screaming to the heavens. And for the love of God, film these assholes. 25' will suddenly become much further away if there's no evidence.
Now if they make filming or speaking illegal, I'm screaming to the heavens
What do you think this law's mostly going to be used for? It's not gonna be enforced when they're 'dealing with idiots', it's gonna be enforced when they don't want to be filmed doing bad shit.