New York, June 15, 2000 --- The Committee to Protect Journalists
is deeply concerned about a second incident in less than two weeks in
which police commandeered a television news camera and posed as journalists
to settle a hostage crisis.
On Tuesday, June 13, police in Newark, New Jersey, seized a New Jersey
Network (NJN) news crew's video camera when an alleged hostage-taker
demanded that he be interviewed on television. Ali Kemoun had allegedly
killed his wife and mother-in-law and was holding his nine-year-old
son hostage in his house when he made the demand.
The Newark incident came less than two weeks after a similar case in
Luxembourg, where police on June 1 commandeered a camera from a local
TV station. In the Luxembourg case, police led a gunman to believe that
he would be allowed to give an interview to a television crew. They
then took the camera, hid a gun inside it and gave it to a police marksman,
who posed as a cameraman and used the hidden gun to shoot the hostage-taker.
[Click here to read a fuller account of this incident.]
"Such actions compromise the perceived independence of all journalists
and increase the risks they face daily in covering dangerous news stories,"
said Ann Cooper, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ).
According to news accounts of the Newark incident, the police told an
NJN cameraman, "We need your camera." A police officer then entered
the house in a ruse designed to distract the hostage-taker by conducting
an interview. News reports said the actual camera taken into the house
was not the one that belonged to NJN; police reportedly substituted
a Newark fire department camera just before starting the bogus interview.
Police returned the first camera to NJN two hours after taking it.
As part of the agreement to appear on camera, Kemoum released his son
before beginning the interview. But he quickly realized the cameraman
was a police officer and not a member of the media and ran to an upper
floor of his house. Newark police kept the tape that had been in the
NJN camera, for a full day, claiming it as evidence, then returned it.
News reports say Newark Mayor Sharpe James "apologized for the confiscation"
but reportedly said police thought it was necessary to pose as reporters
to "prevent [the hostage-taker] from doing anything drastic."
After the incident in Luxembourg, CPJ issued a statement urging law
enforcement organizations to consider the dangers they may create for
legitimate journalists by posing as reporters and cameramen, even with
the goal of saving lives.
Cooper added today, "While we understand that police often find themselves
in desperate situations, and that some law experts believe the confiscation
of a camera in such a situation is legal, we hope this disturbing tactic
does not become a trend. Once again, we urge law enforcement agencies
to consider carefully that these actions might very well serve to target
journalists. We hope alternative tactics will be used that don't place
journalists at risk."
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