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One citizen journalist’s saga may bode poorly for the new arm of the press
By MIKE MILIARD  |  December 13, 2006

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Anyone who wants to understand the perils of being a citizen journalist in an age of DIY media should consider the case of Freeman Z.

Freeman Z is the nom de reportage of Jeffrey Manzelli, a Cambridge sound engineer who, three years ago, was convicted of illegally wiretapping an MBTA cop at an open-air anti-war rally. He was ordered to pay a $450 fine, perform 100 hours of community service, and serve two years on probation.

How you can “wiretap” someone, let alone a cop, at an outdoor protest is a story in and of itself, but it suggests that when it comes to annoying what some like to call the Establishment, the 43-year old Manzelli is something of a pro. Manzelli’s willingness to push the envelope may well have led to his arrest — police often think people like him are a pain in the ass. But he may also have learned the hard way about a law that is ripe for abuse.

Breeding contempt
On September 28, 2002, Manzelli, who often covers speeches and rallies for local radio stations, was tape recording interviews at a well-attended anti-war rally on Boston Common. He noticed MBTA police officer Brian Harer monitoring the entrance to the Park Street subway station. Manzelli approached and, from either 18 feet away (his version) or five feet away (Harer’s) snapped a photo of the cop. What happened next is still under debate in court, more than four years later.

According to Manzelli, Harer — who declined to be interviewed for this story — threatened him, saying, “Don’t take my picture; if you publish it I can sue you personally.”

Manzelli says he walked away for a few moments and returned to Harer, who was by then chatting with MBTA inspector Charles Kenneally. He began interviewing both men, asking Kenneally if it’s true that taking an officer’s photograph is verboten, all the while recording the conversation on a portable cassette deck. The microphone, he contends, was clearly visible.

“I just basically started interviewing him,” Manzelli tells the Phoenix. “I was holding my camera in one hand, and I had the microphone right in my hand like this. No intention to hide it.”

Here’s where things get interesting. According to trial testimony, Harer noticed the mic and asked if he was being recorded. Manzelli said yes, and Harer objected.

Fearing his tapes would be confiscated, Manzelli acted on an impulse. He threw the microphone and the fanny-pack in which he carried his tape recorder and cassettes toward a crowd of protesters. Court records state that Manzelli yelled “Take the tapes! Take the tapes!” He remembers hollering, “Take it! Take it! Take it!” instead. But that’s academic. Either way, his goal was to protect his recordings.

Manzelli then moved toward the Park Street stairs, where Harer followed him. He threw another cassette toward the crowd, before being slapped with handcuffs and charged with unlawful wiretapping and disorderly conduct. After a two-day trial in 2003, he was found guilty on both counts.

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  Topics: News Features , U.S. Government, U.S. State Government, Rodney King,  More more >
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