South Florida cops claimed they were “forced to fire” at a 32-year-old Black man named Donald Taylor in August because he was armed and would not follow commands.

But newly surfaced video contradicts those claims, showing the Black man walking away from cops with his hands raised to his sides showing no gun in his hand when a Hollywood police officer fired a single shot as Taylor had his back turned to the cops, killing him.

  • OshagHennessey@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    You’re right, there’s no expectation to privacy in public.

    HOWEVER, if I follow you around in public, every time you leave your house, all day, every day, and record all of your public activities when I do so, that’s still a crime, and it’s called “stalking”.

    Furthermore, when there is no reasonable suspicion a crime has occurred, merely investigating that public footage would be akin to following that person in public, which is defined as a “search” in the eyes of the law.

    So, the sticky legal issue is, you can legally record it. But, unless you have a reasonable suspicion someone has committed a crime, the fourth ammendment prevents you from watching it. If all one needs to do is watch a video to violate our rights, its perfectly reasonable to expect us not to want that video watched.