Tech Law

Facebook Live Video of Shooting Aftermath Triggers Anger, Anguish, Questions

Americans have expressed outrage at Wednesday’s police shooting of Philando Castile, an African-American man, which happened in St. Paul, Minnesota, during a traffic stop for a broken tail light.

Castile was shot in front of his girlfriend Diamond Reynolds and their 4-year-old daughter, who were in the car.

Reynolds used Facebook Live to stream video of the aftermath of the shooting.

The graphic video, which shows Castile bleeding and groaning in pain while the officer who shot him curses and continues aiming his gun at Castile, had garnered more than 4.4 million views by Thursday evening, and nearly 300,000 shares.

President Obama posted a lengthy comment in response to Castile’s shooting and the police shooting earlier this week of another black man, Alton Sterling, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Sterling’s shooting was captured on video by several bystanders.

Race undoubtedly played a role in Castile’s shooting, said Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton, who called on the United States Department of Justice to investigate.

Outrage and Anguish

There were more than 16,000 comments on Reddit less than 24 hours after the shooting, many expressing outrage.

“There is no reason four shots should be fired from a foot away, especially when he let the officer know he had a concealed weapon,” wrote chemicalbeats37.

“I saw this guy’s last moments of life,” wrote doyou_booboo. “His last breaths. A mother in a state of shock, watching someone she cared about die. I saw a three year old witnessing something that she doesn’t fully understand yet, but which might have lasting repercussions on her psyche.”

A Twitter feed on the shooting also displayed the anguish of commenters.

"It's okay mommy. It's okay, I'm right here with you" #PhilandoCastile's girlfriend's 4yo daughter said to her mother. & I am broken.

— deray mckesson (@deray) July 7, 2016

A Gofundme campaign set up by Xavier Burgin to benefit the Castile family raised more than US$60,000 toward a goal of $80,000 in its first 19 hours. Upwards of 2,200 people contributed. Castile’s sister Moni also started a GoFundMe campaign, which had raised more than $16,000 toward its $30,000 goal in the first 12 hours.

Facebook’s Role

Facebook took down the streaming video of the shooting for several hours but restored it after some users protested. Facebook claimed the takedown was due to a technical glitch.

In this day of citizen journalism and ubiquitous video, the role Facebook played in disseminating knowledge of the incident was critical. What legal, ethical and other issues do companies that offer live-streaming services face, as people use them to document events in real time?

“Typically, posting something that showcases someone getting shot would be an automatic delete,” said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.

However, that’s not the case “if it has to do with abuse of power and you position yourself as a news service,” he told TechNewsWorld.

Users have posted disturbing images on Facebook and other streaming services before.

Whether that raises legal and ethical issues “depends on whether the service is considered to be a common carrier with an obligation to not discriminate on the basis of content or use, or a publisher, constrained by considerations of copyright and fair use,” noted Mike Jude, a program manager at Stratecast/Frost & Sullivan.

“If Facebook’s a publisher that allows individuals to use its platform to post their content, it has the right to determine what gets posted,” he told TechNewsWorld. “However, if it’s a common carrier, then it can’t and shouldn’t, regardless of impact. That’s called free speech.”

The FCC is wrestling with the question of whether Facebook is a common carrier with a must-serve obligation, Jude said.

“There has been a lot of dispute regarding the liability of various intermediaries such as Facebook — which doesn’t necessarily fall in areas Congress envisioned when they passed various laws,” Yasha Heidari of the Heidari Power Law Group told TechNewsWorld.

There’s no hard-and-fast rule as to what is or isn’t allowed, so streaming services will “just simply accept the risk and moderate after the fact, doing their best to comply with known laws,” Enderle said. “The difficulty with any kind of censorship is knowing where to draw the line.”

Forget about ethical standards, which “seem to mean very little on the Internet,” Jude remarked. “I would say there are moral [arguments] for not publishing such content.”

Richard Adhikari

Richard Adhikari has written about high-tech for leading industry publications since the 1990s and wonders where it's all leading to. Will implanted RFID chips in humans be the Mark of the Beast? Will nanotech solve our coming food crisis? Does Sturgeon's Law still hold true? You can connect with Richard on Google+.

1 Comment

  • Personally I think viral video like this feeds a narrative and jump to conclusion without all the facts. News media should not use this as proof of anything. Many times events leading to a questionable shooting or aggressive response by police is not shown in the video. We do not know what happened prior to the police response. It’s really a baited video trying to get a preconceived

    judgment on what happened. In the end it may draw protests and violence over something that happened differently then what the video shows.

    It’s interesting too that plenty of people have smart phones but I never see video of black on black shootings, or people filming gang violence or other crime. But the first thing they do is start filming on a traffic stop? Sometimes I wonder if we have a situation where the disregard for respecting officers and the law has turned into a viral means of proving that cops are racist or aggressive. When truth is, the people the police are dealing with do not obey their commands, resist arrest, and do not make the officer feel safe. In every video I have seen, the person shot elevated the situation to a point that would raise the officers defenses and question the subjects actions. If there is a gun in the vehicle and you cannot see their hands. That’s a problem, especially if that person has prior gun violations. For me the big problem between the Black’s and police is their resistance to obey authority. Clearly this is proven with groups like Black Panthers and Black Lives Matter. These are reverse racism hate groups who target police rather than addressing the crime, lack of obedience and bad behavior in the black communities affected most by violence. More violence equals more cops and more conflicts.

    This is definitely a racial issue but it’s not a problem with police. It’s a problem with how many blacks view police, and how they don’t respect the law.

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