California Cop Abandons Investigation to Harass and Intimidate Man for Video RecordingBy Carlos MillerPINAC Jun. 30, 2014 |
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Less than a week after a Southern California cop allowed a suspect to escape because he had to harass a citizen for recording the arrest, a Northern California cop abandoned his investigation to harass a man recording him. The Redding police officer, who was detaining a young man in front of a store as well as another man out of frame, turned to the man recording him, who was standing more than 25 feet away, and accused him of “interrupting my investigation.” Meanwhile, a woman and her dog strolled right through the investigation, the dog even pausing to sniff one of the suspects who was seated on a sidewalk. But the cop was only concerned about the man with the camera, telling him he was unable to concentrate because of the camera. “Put the phone down on the hood of the car,” the cop ordered as he walked over, following the order up with the typical cop growl that usually precedes a physical beat down. “DOWN ON THE HOOD OF THE CAR!” The man complied as the cop continued with his bullying tactics. “Step away from the car. This ain’t a debate, do you understand me. Turn around and face away from me.” The cop then demanded his name and date-of-birth, even though the cop never stated what crime the man was suspected of committing. The man, Nicholas Thomas Hyatt, 25, provided this information, then resorted to playing the cop apologist, telling the cop he was only recording because the suspect was being disrespectful towards him. But the cop wasn’t buying it and ran his name for a warrant search, accusing Hyatt of being “disrespectful” and “making his own baby cry.” But there is only one person who was being disrespectful in the video. There is only one person who made the baby cry. There is only one person who broke the law in the video by using his power to clamp down on a citizen’s First Amendment right to record. And now it’s just a matter of finding out his name. Read More |