Author Topic: S.F. Mayor Breed Supports Police Raid of Journalist's Home While Supervisor Condemns It  (Read 379 times)

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Offline Millee

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San Francisco Mayor London Breed said Wednesday she supports a decision by two judges allowing police to search freelance journalist Bryan Carmody's home and office, as the first city official spoke out against the raid.

The raid last Friday was part of a criminal investigation into what the San Francisco Police Department says was the illegal release of its report about the Feb. 22 death of Public Defender Jeff Adachi. Carmody said a confidential source gave him the police report, which he then sold to several news outlets.

"Our role is to follow the law, and the judges ultimately make the decisions," Breed said. "They made the decision. And so at this point, you know, I support their decision."

But Supervisor Hillary Ronen disagreed: "The police have gone about this completely wrong."

"I don't love that (Carmody) took this document that should never have been released in the first place and sold it off to news outlets as a salacious story to hurt Jeff's legacy and his family," Ronen said. "But that doesn't mean that we undermine one of the most important hallmarks of our democracy because we don't like what this individual is doing."

The police report said that the night Adachi died, a woman told police he had asked to use the apartment where paramedics found him, that he was with a woman who identified herself as "Caterina," and that police found empty bottles of alcohol and cannabis gummies, as well as syringes that may have been left by paramedics. Adachi died due to a combination of cocaine, alcohol and pre-existing heart problems, according to a report from the city's medical examiner.

Two San Francisco Superior Court judges signed warrants authorizing police to search Carmody's home and office. They took computers, cellphones, cameras and flash drive, among other things.

Breed said questions about the legality of the search would play out in the courts.

"This is about holding someone within the police department accountable for doing something that should not have happened," she said.

First Amendment attorneys say the raid violated laws protecting journalists and could set a dangerous precedent for press freedoms.

https://www.kqed.org/news/11747266/sf-mayor-breed-supports-police-raid-of-journalists-home-while-supervisor-condemns-it

Offline mountaineer

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Leftists really don't like the First Amendment (or the others, I know, but especially the First).
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