ACLU of Washington Supports Professor Detained for Taking Photos on Public Property (11/15/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
SEATTLE –
The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington today filed a lawsuit on behalf
of Shirley Scheier, a University of
Washington professor who was detained by city of
Snohomish police for taking
photographs of power lines as part of an art project. Filed in Snohomish County
Superior Court, the lawsuit seeks compensation for her wrongful detention.
“Taking photographs of objects or people in plain view is not
a crime. Police should not presume that it is a suspicious act, and should not
overreact by detaining people for taking pictures,” said ACLU of Washington
Legal Director Sarah Dunne.
Scheier is a 54-year-old artist and Associate Professor of
Fine Art at the University of
Washington who often uses photos of
public land and public structures in her artistic prints. Her artwork featuring
Washington’s landscape was
recently featured in a show at the university’s Jacob Lawrence Gallery.
In October 2005, Scheier drove to Snohomish and stopped to
take pictures of the power towers at a substation near downtown from outside the
facility’s gate. She was on public property, and there were no signs indicating
that photography was not allowed.
As she drove home on State Highway 9, Snohomish police pulled
her over. More officers arrived soon, began to question her about her pictures
and demanded to see them. Scheier explained that she is a university faculty
member interested in power lines as part of our ecosystem.
“Power lines are an integral aspect of the Pacific
Northwest landscape. The actual physical structures are sculpturally
quite beautiful. They have a majestic figurative stance on the landscape,”
Scheier said.
Police frisked and handcuffed Scheier, and placed her in the
back of a police car for almost half an hour. The incident was traumatic for
Scheier, particularly because the handcuffs were painful and she suffers from a
blood clotting disorder.
She was eventually released after officers photographed maps
that Scheier used to find the power station. The officers also told her she
would be contacted by the FBI about the incident.
Scheier’s experience highlights a pattern of law enforcement
officers harassing people for taking pictures in public since September 11,
2001. In fact, other photographers also have complained to the ACLU about being
harassed by law enforcement.
The ACLU recently obtained compensation from the city of
Seattle for Bogdan Mohora, who was wrongfully arrested for
taking photographs of police making an arrest in downtown
Seattle. In 2005, the ACLU assisted
a photographer when King County Sheriff’s deputies seized the memory card in his
camera for taking pictures of artwork in the
Seattle bus tunnel. And in 2004, the
ACLU assisted photography student Ian Spiers, who was questioned by law
enforcement for taking pictures at the Ballard Locks, a popular tourist
destination.
Attorneys in the case are cooperating attorney Venkat
Balabrasumani and Aaron Caplan
of the ACLU of Washington.
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