Why is murray not allowed to have a camera




















Can Technology Hinder Creativity? Kas Stone. Forging and Expressing Meaningful Connections. Read This Issue. Chris Murray is a fine-art landscape photographer from New York State. In photography his goal is to make images that are not a literal document of the woods, mountains, and rivers of his home state, but rather a creative expression of his relationship with the places that ceaselessly inspire him.

The ferns spread out before me in shades of burnt orange, gold, and brown. Framing the scene through my viewfinder I realised I would not be able to capture the desired depth of field with one exposure; focus stacking would be required.

No problem. I shot three exposures, varying only the focus point. Later, I imported the exposures into Lightroom, opened them as layers in Photoshop and completed the focus stack. If I owned one of the new-fangled mirrorless cameras I could have done the focus stacking completely in-camera. Even easier. While recently reading a monograph on a Harry Callahan exhibit the writer mentioned the process of making an image with an 8 x 10 view camera.

The Court of Appeal said that three of the five arguments put forward by Bridges and Liberty in their case were valid, including the lack of guidance and rules as to when the force could use AFR and who would be on the database of images in the watch list. Technology ethicist Stephanie Hare also worries this sets a precedent only for South Wales Police, and not law enforcement across the country or the private sector.

Read more: The backlash against face recognition has begun — but who will win? This action today by Mayor Murray will help to ensure that SPD deploys the cameras as soon as possible while continuing to bargain with our police unions in good faith.

The City then began a stakeholder and community engagement process as part of a pilot. A March survey conducted by the Community Police Commission and SPD, as a part of its body-worn camera pilot program, found that 86 percent of community members would want officers to be wearing body cameras when they responded to a call for service. The body-camera issue received heightened attention after no video was captured of the highly charged killing of Lyles , a year-old black woman and mother of four who was shot June 18 by two white officers during a confrontation in her Magnuson Park apartment in Northeast Seattle.

Only audio was recorded on microphones worn by officers Jason Anderson and Steven McNew, who both said Lyles suddenly attacked them with one or two knives after she reported a burglary of her apartment. He said he had originally planned to issue the order within days of the shooting, but held off on the chance of reaching an accord with the guild. Guild President Kevin Stuckey said Monday he was confused by the order, calling it unnecessary because both sides are still at the bargaining table.

He declined to say whether the guild was seeking extra pay, citing confidentiality rules surrounding bargaining. But he said such compensation has occurred in other police departments around the country where body cameras are in use.



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