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Man Arrested In Denver For Taking Photographs of Hotel

 
 
angharad
14:00 / 05.12.02
As reported at 2600.com - I heard Maginnis call their radio show ("Off The Hook" on WBAI in NYC) last night to report the incident.

An amateur photographer named Mike Maginnis was arrested on Tuesday in his home city of Denver - for simply taking pictures of buildings in an area where Vice President Cheney was residing. Maginnis told his story on Wednesday's edition of Off The Hook.

Maginnis's morning commute took him past the Adams Mark Hotel on Court Place. Maginnis, who says he always carried his camera wherever he went, snapped about 30 pictures of the hotel and the surrounding area - which included Denver police, Army rangers, and rooftop snipers. Maginnis, who works in information technology, frequently photographs such subjects as corporate buildings and communications equipment.

The following is Maginnis's account of what transpired:

As he was putting his camera away, Maginnis found himself confronted by a Denver police officer who demanded that he hand over his film and camera. When he refused to give up his Nikon F2, the officer pushed him to the ground and arrested him.

After being brought to the District 1 police station on Decatur Street, Maginnis was made to wait alone in an interrogation room. Two hours later, a Secret Service agent arrived, who identified himself as Special Agent "Willse."

The agent told Maginnis that his "suspicious activities" made him a threat to national security, and that he would be charged as a terrorist under the USA-PATRIOT act. The Secret Service agent tried to make Maginnis admit that he was taking the photographs to analyze weaknesses in the Vice President's security entourage and "cause terror and mayhem."

When Maginnis refused to admit to being any sort of terrorist, the Secret Service agent called him a "raghead collaborator" and a "dirty pinko faggot."

After approximately an hour of interrogation, Maginnis was allowed to make a telephone call. Rather than contacting a lawyer, he called the Denver Post and asked for the news desk. This was immediately overheard by the desk sergeant, who hung up the phone and placed Maginnis in a holding cell.

Three hours later, Maginnis was finally released, but with no explanation. He received no copy of an arrest report, and no receipt for his confiscated possessions. He was told that he would probably not get his camera back, as it was being held as evidence.

Maginnis's lawyer contacted the Denver Police Department for an explanation of the day's events, but the police denied ever having Maginnis - or anyone matching his description - in custody. At press time, the Denver PD's Press Information Office did not return telephone messages left by 2600.

The new police powers introduced by the USA-PATRIOT act, in the name of fighting terrorism, have been frightening in their apparent potential for abuse. Mike Maginnis's experience on Tuesday is a poignant example of how this abuse is beginning to occur. It suggests that a wide range of activities which might be considered "suspicious" could be suddenly labeled a prelude to terrorism, and be grounds for arrest.

http://www.2600.com/news/display/display.shtml?id=1441
 
 
Lionheart
05:20 / 06.12.02
I was on that show. Though I'm not the guy who got arrested. That femal caller who said that the agent could be charged with a bias crime was half-right. He can't be charged for calling someone a "raghead collaborator" but the "pinko commie faggot" thing could get the agent fired.
 
 
angharad
13:51 / 06.12.02
... except who would fire him? for what? if the incident 'never happened'?
 
 
Lionheart
14:46 / 06.12.02
Like i said before, there will be a discrepancy in the police car surveillance videos if the arrest was covered up.

Or maybe the ACLU lawyer asked the wrong question. He should've asked if Mike was in the station at that time and not if he was arrested by the cops. Cause it might've been an arrest under the orders of the secret service. So the local police department would say that they didn't arrest him, but if asked if he was arrested by the SS then they'll probably say yes.
 
 
000
20:54 / 08.12.02
And in other showcases of tyranny, I present:

SIOUX FALLS, South Dakota (AP) --A man who made a remark about a "burning Bush" during the president's March 2001 trip to Sioux Falls was sentenced Friday to 37 months in prison.

Richard Humphreys of Portland, Oregon was convicted in September of threatening to kill or harm the president and said he plans to appeal. He has said the comment was a prophecy protected under his right to free speech.

Humphreys said he got into a barroom discussion in nearby Watertown with a truck driver. A bartender who overheard the conversation realized the president was to visit Sioux Falls the next day and told police Humphreys talked about a "burning Bush" and the possibility of someone pouring a flammable liquid on Bush and lighting it.
 
 
000
21:12 / 08.12.02
And my guess as to why Dick Cheney refused to have his picture taken?

It was a Psychic Camera which would have revealed his Reptilian-ness
 
 
000
21:13 / 08.12.02
(Well, not really)
 
 
Murray Hamhandler
23:45 / 09.12.02
Fuck this fucking stink-hole country.

"Yes, that's right. A one-way ticket. I don't plan on returning..."
 
 
Perfect Tommy
17:24 / 10.12.02
One-way tickets, of course, might be flagged as a sign of terrorist intent.
 
 
Cherry Bomb
20:11 / 10.12.02
Fuck this fucking stink-hole country.

"Yes, that's right. A one-way ticket. I don't plan on returning..."


Step ahead on that one, Deric
 
 
LVX23
19:41 / 16.12.02
also...

The editor of vox posted a story that advised that Bush be destroyed because, by his own definition, he is a terrorist. It was mostly satirical, but had some elements of real violent intention. As soon as he posted it, many of his readers warned him "dude, you're crazy! You're gonna have FBI at your door." I thought the same as this is consistently one of the most radical sites on the web. Sure enough, he sent the following message out to one of his friends on Sat morning and has not been heard from since. His website is still up and running, but no word from vox yet. Below is a post he has made while on the lam...

http://www.voxnyc.com

"Dear Valis Thank you for your excellent site. At 10 oclock this morning (Dec 13) Approximately 40 agents from a joint group of CIA, FBI, And Major Crimes unit. Surrounded my home on Long Island New York (I was not there) and entered and proceeded to conduct a thorough search and removal operation while detaining a tennant who occupuys an apartment on the premises. I am in contact with my counsel (from NYCLU) NY Civil Liberties Union. (Norm Seigal) I will try to make a further update tommorrow. As for now I wish someone could archive as many of the articles on my voxnyc.com site as possible. I apologize for such a brief note but it has been a terrible moment and I am literally on the run. I do not wish this information to be released until after I have suitable time to consult with my counsul maybe a day or two. Thank you vox"

Also, found these two great posts on a board where I was trying to find out the haps with vox.

"Popular? Where? At the White House? Let me tell you something. I'm a coach bus driver who shuttles many a people from Milwaukee to Chicago and back everyday and I have not met ONE single person who is in favor of our current president. Not one. I've even had about 5 or 6 people tell me outright that Bush is an dictator (out loud, in front of everyone else on the coach). Aside from the City Express, I'm also doing more and more charters for anti-Bush protesters than ever before. It's not hard to figure out that the current government controlled media image of Bush being a 'popular' president is only a fantasy in their own minds. " - A navy veteran

"I work at a XXX in XXXX state. A coworker and friend of mine who was medically discharged from the Army recently received notice from the Army that he was being returned to active duty. He is to report to Ft. Riley, Kansas in May 2003. He was quite surprised, because he thought that he was completely discharged from the Army with no reserve commitment. Had he not been medically discharged, he would still be on active duty. He still doesn't know if it was some kind of mistake, or if they are actually recalling recently medically discharged troops. He says that his father read something about medically discharged people being recalled to active duty. If this is not a mistake, this sounds like the last step before a draft is instituted. My friend has a bad knee but is otherwise healthy. Perhaps they are recalling such people to active duty to man the stateside bases while everybody else goes off to war. "
 
 
LVX23
19:58 / 16.12.02
"Well, if the police say so, then it MUST beTRUE!"

http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/local/article/0,1299,DRMN_15_1601428,00.html

Police refute NY radio story
Man claimed Denver cops took his camera during Cheney visit

By John C. Ensslin, Rocky Mountain News
December 11, 2002

Denver police Tuesday disputed a story by a man who claimed officers confiscated his camera last week after he snapped photographs outside the hotel where Vice President Dick Cheney had been staying.

A man identifying himself as Michael Maginnis made the accusation last week during a radio program called Off the Hook on WBAI-FM in New York City.

Maginnis could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

In the interview last week, Maginnis described himself as a Denver area amateur photographer. On his way to work, he said, he took pictures of officers in military gear and snipers on the roof.

When a Denver Police officer demanded the camera, Maginnis said he refused and was shoved to the ground.

He said police took him to the District 1 substation on Decatur Street, where he was held for six hours. During that time, he claims a Secret Service agent interrogated him for 45 minutes.

He said he never got his camera or film back.

A spokesman for the Secret Service called the story "bogus" and said it never happened.

"There was no contact made during the vice president's trip or any other time," said spokesman Lon Garner.

Denver Police spokeswoman Virginia Lopez said police had no record of a Michael Maginnis being taken into custody at District 1 that day.

She said the station commander said he would have been advised if the Secret Service had done an interview at the station. He had no knowledge of any such interview, she said.
 
  
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