A man has become the first in the UK to be arrested over videos filmed of women on nights out without their consent, with some in vulnerable states.
The 27-year-old from Bradford was taken into custody on suspicion of stalking and harassment after reports of women being followed, filmed and harassed in Manchester city centre.
What? For public filming? But that's legal!
In April, a number of women spoke to the Guardian after being filmed without their knowledge and consent, with the videos being posted on social media. In some cases, the women were later identified and harassed online. Some victims described it as “disgusting” and said they felt violated on finding out videos of them had been viewed hundreds of thousands of times and attracted misogynistic comments.
Well, ladies, maybe show a bit of decorum and don't get falling down drunk in the street, perhaps?
Though filming on a public street is not a crime, it can cross the line into harassment, and women who discovered they had been targeted were asked to report it to police.
And the cops, always eager for an easy life and an offence that doesn't take much work to solve, leaped into action.
GMP said: “After the issue was first brought to our attention, we made several appeals for anyone directly impacted by these videos to come forward. Many women did so, explaining the fear this had created for them, and the impact on their feeling of being safe while out at night.”
Not such 'fear' that they drank sensibly, I take it?
Over the past few months, neighbourhood police officers worked with the CPS to see if charges could be brought against any of the accused. The videos in Manchester were primarily filmed around the Peter Street and Deansgate areas, while videos were also filmed in cities such as Liverpool and London.
Seems like they've put more effort into this than into real crimes, doesn't it?
Ch Insp Stephen Wiggins said: “We took the concerns of the public really seriously on this issue, and have worked hard with partners to assess the full circumstances and what courses of action were available to us. It is a very new and complex issue, but this is a significant development.
“Everyone has the right to feel safe as they enjoy a night out, and these videos have made people, particularly women, not feel like that, which we can’t tolerate.
“Filming in public is legal. However, where this filming crosses the line into offences such as upskirting, stalking or harassment, it’s important that we don’t allow that behaviour.”
You're tackling the wrong behaviour.
1 comment:
I'm curious what was meant by "vulnerable states". Perhaps that involved drunken women squatting down, knickers around their ankles, while they urinated or defacated in the gutter, or perhaps it was the sight of them vomiting into waste bins, front gardens, or just where they stood, all of which I had the misfortune to witness as a County Police officer. Prosecutions for upskirtingting or getting close up photographs of cleavage should, quite rightly, follow, but what about tv and media photographs of drunken behaviour or women in "vulnerable states". Will they now be prosecuted?
Ladies, if you don't want to be photographed in a "vulnerable state", try not to get in one, in the first place.
Penseivat
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