When Cameras Become Evidence: Photography, Power, and the First Amendment cover art

When Cameras Become Evidence: Photography, Power, and the First Amendment

When Cameras Become Evidence: Photography, Power, and the First Amendment

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Two photographs. Seconds apart.
And a much bigger story about photography, accountability, and the right to document power.

In this episode of Beyond the Image, James Patrick examines the events surrounding photographers John Abernathy and Pierre Lavie, whose images captured the moment documentation itself became a threat. As Abernathy was taken down by ICE agents while photographing in public, he instinctively threw his camera to Lavie, preserving evidence that could have been confiscated or destroyed.

The conversation expands to the killing of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, an incident captured on video by multiple bystanders who had every legal right to observe and record. Those videos now sit at the center of public scrutiny and legal debate.

This episode is not about politics.
It is about the First Amendment, press freedom, and why the right to document public officials in public spaces matters more than ever.

Because once the cameras go dark, so does the truth.

https://jamespatrick.com/

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