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Used, Abused and Betrayed

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A young television reporter in Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.A. found out the hard way that thinking “outside the box” — while still abiding by the rules — can come at a price.

On Saturday morning, the 1st of February 2014, 29-year-old Pedro Rivera was at home, about to enjoy a day off, when he heard something on his police scanner about a car crash in town. He noted the address: Main and Capen Streets, in the downtown.

Hartford, with a population of 125,000, is the historical State capital. For 17 years it was the home of renowned author and humorist Samuel Langhorne Clemens, a.k.a. Mark Twain.

All reporters — especially part-timers — want to show what they’re made of … and Mr. Rivera was no exception. He skipped breakfast, bid his wife and infant son goodbye and made a beeline to the scene.

Rivera couldn’t get near the crash because police had cordoned off the area. The intrepid reporter didn’t need to get close, however. He could be a block away and still do his job. That’s because Rivera had a small, remote-controlled quadcopter — a quiet, battery-operated machine equipped with a high definition [HD] video camera.

The DJI Phantom Vision 2

The DJI Phantom Vision 2

It’s a fairly inexpensive device every radio, print and television newsroom should have.

Operating well behind police lines, Rivera aimed his DJI Phantom 2 Vision skyward …

Rivera operating his Phantom

Pedro Rivera operating his drone [Photo by Phantom 2 Vision]

The reporter could tilt the built-in camera and actually see what was being video-taped in “real time” — all from the screen on his smart phone — in this case, an iPhone.

From 150 feet up, Rivera was able to get a birds-eye view.

Rivera was unaware, but in the wreckage was the body of a male passenger. The dead man of course could not be seen from 150 feet up and half a block away … he couldn’t even be seen by someone standing alongside the car. That’s because police had covered the body with a sheet, a common practice at fatals.

Aerial footage Pedro Rivera shot on Main Street in Hartford on 1 February 2014. The crash vehicle is on the right, parked on the lawn in front of a 3-story brick building.

Aerial footage Pedro Rivera shot on Main Street in Hartford on 1 February 2014. The crash vehicle is on the right, parked on the lawn in front of a 3-story brick building.

Rivera’s goal was to get some exclusive footage for his TV station, WFSB. Inexpensive material too. In fact, his venture with a quadcopter was quieter, safer … and way, way, way cheaper than if the station had paid to put a real chopper in the sky.

A comparison: an image taken on the ground by print journalists and by Rivera's drone.

A comparison: the first image, taken on the ground by another TV journalist; the other taken by Rivera’s drone. [Courtesy of lawyer and drone enthusiast Peter Sachs of Branford, Connecticut]

Uniformed Hartford Police suddenly interrupted Rivera’s work. Officers surrounded the reporter and ordered him to take down his small machine, claiming it was “jeopardizing officer safety” — and the integrity of the victim. Police didn’t arrest Rivera, but they hassled him and essentially told him to go forth and multiply.

The reporter had gone from yellow police tape to red tape.

Officers then put in a phone call — behind Rivera’s back — to his employer, WFSB-TV, where he worked part-time. Their allegation was that Rivera had “interfered” with a police investigation. A senior policeman asked station management to reprimand the reporter, a former intern at the station.

‘COPSUCKERS’ … AND WORSE

Rather than break a national news story and give police a strong message about the need for an independent media, WFSB capitulated. Instead of praising its reporter for going the extra mile — giving him the thumbs up and reminding him that it’s never crowded along that extra mile — station management called Rivera into a meeting and told him to stay away for a week — without pay. That’s code for ‘Go forth and …’

Owing that the story has gone around the world [and embarrassed the hell out of WFSB], Rivera’s punishment may be a lot more than a week’s lost wages. The journalist has not been called back since he was ordered out in the middle of his shift. That was more than a month ago.

In a statement to the media, the station’s General Manager, Klarn Depalma, offered this: “The person identified in the police report is a temporary, on-call employee. However he was not working for the station on the day of the incident. He was not assigned to shoot video of the crime scene by WFSB and has never been compensated for any drone video …”

How’s that for distancing oneself from your reporter? No one ever claimed Rivera was on duty, or that he’d been assigned to shoot video that morning. That’s precisely the point. He was there on his own initiative, something media suits should appreciate.

Pedro Rivera had gone from a high to a low: from seeing the roof of a sedan from 150 feet in the air … to a close-up view of the undercarriage of a bus.

Where is the logic here? There is none.

However, there are a couple of ironies: One, the story was broken not by WFSB, but by a rival, the local FOX outlet. Two, people living in the building where the accident happened or in the 4-story building across the street could have easily taken much better photographs. Officers might have also accused them of interfering with a police investigation.

It gets worse. Mike Magnoli, a reporter with Fox CT [Connecticut], WTIC, was on scene with his camera-person. [Notice the politically-correct term] In fact, Magnoili was only 20 feet or so from the crumpled car. By then, the victim’s body had been removed and the injured taken to hospital.

“Police allowed us to get this close … to shoot video.[Mike Magnoli]

Fox CT Reporter Mike Magnoli

Fox CT ‘Morning Live’ Reporter Mike Magnoli at the scene of the fatal crash

Police told Magnoli they believed the car had been speeding. No kidding. As in going like a bat out of hell down Capen Street and failing to make a left turn at the T-intersection.

One resident also wondered if the potholes on Main Street may have contributed to the crash.

LAWSUIT FILED

Hartford Police, including the Chief, will now have to appear before a judge and jury and explain their behaviour. If things don’t go their way, they may even have to pay Rivera some money, compliments of taxpayers of course. It all depends on how things shake down with a lawsuit filed on 18th February 2014 by legal Top Gun Norm Pattis.

According to Pattis, Rivera’s right to monitor police response to a motor vehicle accident was violated [First Amendment], as well as his protection against unreasonable seizure [Fourth Amendment].

Page 1 of the lawsuit filed by lawyer Norm Pattis of Bethany, Connecticut.

Page 1 of the lawsuit filed by lawyer Norm Pattis of Bethany, Connecticut.

The lawsuit reads, “Private citizens do not need local, state or federal approval to operate a remote-controlled aircraft” … and that police had no cause to believe Rivera was “in violation of any law or regulatory requirement.” How Pattis puts it is that, “The plaintiff was standing outside of the area denoted as the crime scene by officers responding to the accident.” In other words, he wasn’t breaking any state or federal law.

“He was standing in a public place, operating his device in public space, observing events that were in plain view …”

Rivera wants compensatory damages for lost wages and emotional stress, as well as punitive [punishment] damages. He’s also asking the court for a declaratory judgement that he was not breaking any rules by flying his Phantom … and for an injunction to stop Hartford Police from “interfering with the lawful operation of drones within city limits.”

To find out more about Pattis’ lawsuit and the legal grey area surrounding the use of drones, click here: http://www.pattisblog.com/index.php?article=George_Jetson_and_Drones_6544

MASSIVE MEDIA COVERAGE

Rivera’s run-in with police morphed into an international story. It seemed that every major news organization covered it. Google ‘Pedro Rivera Hartford’ and you’ll see what I mean.

Here’s a screen-capture of the story as it appeared in Motherboard, an online magazine and video channel “dedicated to the intersection of technology, science and humans.” The piece is written by science and technology reporter Jason Koebler.

Rivera told Koebler, “I think what happened to me falls in the category of the war on cameras by the police. Whenever the police are videotaped, they try to detain people and confiscate the camera.”

Screen Shot 2014-02-25 at 12.41.08 AM

You can read the entire story by clicking on this link:  http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/journalist-is-suing-the-police-who-grounded-his-drone

To one of the stories on Rivera’s plight, a reader named Leigh posted the following comment:

“I support the guy. It really bugs me that no one says anything when the news helicopters hoover at 1,000 or 1,500 feet to get aerials … but this poor guy at 150 feet, with a tiny electric helicopter, gets in trouble. [with the] crazy wide-angle lens of a GoPro [camera] at 150 feet, you can barely make out anyone’s face.

This dude broke no laws, yet had to lose a week’s pay because his employer got a little bit scared.

I hope he is rewarded his lost pay and I really wish his employer apologizes and says, ‘Thanks for thinking outside the box when it comes to new ways of telling a story visually.’

It’s not radio, people, it’s television. You need pictures to tell a story and in an era of shrinking budgets, finding new economical ways to capture images should be rewarded, not penalized.”

As the California-based website WantToKnowInfo.com puts it, “This could be a key case which determines who has the right to use drones. Do we really want only the military and government to have the right to use them?”

On the 24th of February 2014, Matthew Schroyer, founder and president of the Professional Society of Drone Journalists, threw his support behind Pedro Rivera. Read his statement:

http://www.dronejournalism.org/news/2014/2/statement-in-support-of-pedro-rivera-from-the-professional-society-of-drone-journalists

Rivera never thought that his “going the extra mile” would become an international news story. Here’s a portion of the telephone talk we had on 25th February 2014 … note what Rivera says at the end. The clip runs 02:15.

Download: pedro-25-february-2014.m4a

ISSUES WITH PRIVATE DRONES

The kerfuffle over a reporter trying to get news footage with his private quad-copter brings to a head the issue of remote-controlled aircraft — such as the DJI Phantom, currently the most popular unit on the market.

I own two DJI Phantoms, including the Vision 2, the same one Rivera was using. And, yes, I have wondered if I could get possible news footage with my machines. If I come across an accident scene or a fire, and if I’m not hindering anyone, why not get some aerial shots?

I’ve had the Phantoms since last fall, and I can clearly see a need for regulations — especially as more and more people buy the devices. The Phantoms are a heck of a lot of fun, fairly easy to fly and while there are fly-aways [I've had three], one can get some clear, near broadcast-quality video. I’m not surprised they’re selling like hotcakes. These things are revolutionizing photography.

Well. See for yourself. Check out this short, High Definition video clip shot by my Phantom 2 Vision over my neighbourhood in the west end of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. This is raw video, mind you. It was shot on a slightly windy day in October 2013.

I believe a vast majority of quadcopter owners are responsible and thoughtful, but assholes see them as a clever way to break the law. In Canada, a quadcopter has already been used to drop cigarettes behind a prison wall. At a prison in the U.S., a personal drone was used to fly in some dope. I know you’re thinking, “These ragbags behind bars … do they actually know ragbags on the outside?” Yup, they do. Truth is, those Bible-thumping and Native Spiritualism classes in the joint aren’t always taken seriously by inmates.

Retired television reporter Paul McLaughlin of Saint John, New Brunswick, wonders what would happen if the paparazzi had the quadcopters. “Imagine the paparazzi at an event with 50 overhead?” he writes.

“This is a game-changer in a broad number of areas including the law, journalism and privacy.”

Another aspect that reader Charles alludes to is: do people have the right to shoot down the drones if they are over their own property? [see his letter below]

Read more about personal qaudcopters in a post on this same website called “Coming To A Sky Near You … a QuadCopter!” 

PEDRO RIVERA

But back to Mr. Rivera. Good job for sticking to your guns, and shame on those at the television station who dropped to their knees when police contacted them. Pedro Rivera gives me hope that real journalism is still alive.

The young reporter was only trying to earn his spurs. He used his own equipment, on his own time, showed initiative and demonstrated how he could help his media outlet in a competitive market. It was a tragic situation that was handled in a heavy-handed manner. Shame on those supine, grovelling goofs in management.

A number of readers have posted comments in favour of Rivera. One even sent this:

Free Pedro

A GOOFY VIDEO CLIP ON THE USE OF DRONES

Let’s end this post with a fun clip. The crew at Netflix did this parody on Amazon’s plan to deploy commercial, remote-controlled aircraft to deliver packages. The ones used in the production of this video are the original Phantoms, the Phantom One.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ucz3JpvDQjk

For another blog piece on quadcopters with a focus on regulations, click on: http://byronchristopher.org/2014/03/04/coming-to-a-sky-near-you/


Phantom Over Lewis Estates

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