Was a Man Just Arrested for Tweeting the G20 Protests?
Monday, October 5th, 2009 03:07 am GMT -4 in News Briefs by Michael Cervieri
A New York man’s been arrested for Tweeting the cat and mouse interactions between police and protesters at last week’s G20 Summit in Pittsburgh. At least it appears that way.
I’ve read this article from the Times a few times now and don’t know whether it’s because the writing’s so muddled, the premise so absurd or my four hours of sleep is blocking some necessary synaptic connection needed to understand why this actually happened, but what most definitely happened is that a man was arrested.
Apparently for Tweeting.
Or, in the parlance of the Times, 41-year-old Elliot Madison was “charged with hindering apprehension or prosecution, criminal use of a communication facility and possession of instruments of crime.”
I think — if I read this right — Elliot camped out in his hotel with a police scanner, a nom de guerre and favorite Twitter app and basically sent out updates on where the police were heading at any one time. Sort of like, wait for it, Iranian protesters did to much global fanfare just a few months back.
According to the Times:
A criminal complaint in Pennsylvania accuses him of “directing others, specifically protesters of the G-20 summit, in order to avoid apprehension after a lawful order to disperse.”
That’s about as helpful as the Times is in explaining the infraction. Are the police claiming that one cannot monitor their position and activity through scanners and then broadcast that information (via sms, Twitter or otherwise)? Are they saying that Elliot was aiding and abetting by sending information directly to people engaged in criminal conduct?
And is this a free speech issue where a) one should be able to report on the whereabouts of public servants, and b) make that information available in the time, manner and means one chooses? The Times doesn’t say. Maybe they don’t have any idea either.
What did happen though is that FBI agents spent 16 hours searching Elliot’s Jackson Heights, Queens home.
Just strange.
UPDATE 01: The Electronic Frontier Foundation posted Madison’s motion and his lawyer’s supporting declaration.
UPDATE 02:: As Russ notes in the comments below, BuzzNews fills in some blanks and from there we get a first hand report from Birds Before the Storm via Steampunk Magazine.
Here’s a related article from today:
http://www.buzznews.net/buzz-extra/general/5227-noted-steampunk-arrested-for-tweeting-g20-demonstration
There’s a pretty good report of what’s happened here: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09278/1003126-53.stm
Thanks guys. Appreciate the updates.