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posted by takyon on Sunday October 01 2017, @08:08AM   Printer-friendly
from the FOIA-shy-LEOs dept.

Submitted via IRC for guy_

Police Chief Takes To Facebook To Complain About A Journalist Committing Journalism

Generally speaking, law enforcement is a closed shop. It usually takes diligent efforts by journalists to pry loose documents pertaining to misconduct or misbehavior. State laws tend to make this more difficult than it should be by granting law enforcement agencies tons of public records exemptions.

It's this strained relationship being highlighted in an incredibly ill-advised Facebook post by the Aurora (IL) Police Department, penned by police chief Kristen Ziman. As Washington Post reporter Wesley Lowery pointed out on Twitter, it's not every day you witness a police department berate a journalist for practicing journalism.

For six months, a reporter at a local newspaper has been seeking essentially the complete case file of the tragic incident where a young man took his own life after exchanging gunshots with an Aurora Police officer in October, 2016. Both the reporter and the publication were especially interested in the officer's dash cam video of the traffic stop that began the entire episode in an apparent attempt to disprove its justification. (The publication wrote an editorial on March 26, 2017, calling into question the officer's actions and our explanation of events.) You can see the stop and events that led up to it on this post.

[...] While I understand FOIA's enhance openness and public transparency, many of the FOIA's this reporter files don't result in published articles. The hours the city has worked to fulfill her FOIA requests has cost taxpayers and resulted in police supervisors devoting their time on FOIA requests rather than concentrating on our crime fighting initiatives. The demand for trust between the community and the police is prolific. At some point, there has to be a trusting relationship between the media and the police.

[...] Finally, the Facebook post says "there has to be a trusting relationship between the media and police." No, there absolutely does not. This is completely wrong. Journalism is nothing more than stenography if it allows government agencies to steer narratives and coverage. Chief Ziman seems to think reporters should accept every statement made by police officials at face value, rather than seek underlying documents. That's not trust. That's obeisance. It's worthless in the context of transparency and accountability.


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  • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Monday October 02 2017, @02:30PM

    by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Monday October 02 2017, @02:30PM (#575906) Journal

    The public must be able to trust that the police aren't worse than the criminals they are supposed to protect us from. The media should be instrumental in keeping the police honest. It's sad that anyone should have to keep the police honest. Honesty is something that was once taken for granted with little to no doubt. It is the police who have destroyed any trust the public and media might have. So the police have nowhere else to point the finger except at themselves.

    Hint to police departments: If you're merely complaining that fulfilling FOIA requests is a resource problem, then streamline the process of fulfilling such requests. Have as much transparency as possible, not as little as possible.

    It seems so obvious as to not need saying. Trust must be earned. Trust is easy to lose. Difficult to get back. It is astonishing that police departments don't seem to understand this.

    Maybe instead of shouting "stop resisting!" as you beat someone to a bloody pulp, start shouting "stop distrusting!" instead.

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