I don't think there's two sides to the recording police issue at all. So far, videos of the police have revealed brutality and protected the innocent victims of police. I've heard of no video that was doctored and ended up doing harm to police.

And even if such people might think of doing that; that's why we have trials, so the people can determine if something is real or fake.

In news from Indianapolis, David Bisard gets away with murder after killing a stopped motorcyclist at an intersection with a BAC of .19 (tested two hours after the crash), ie at least ten drinks. But since the wrong hospital employee drew his blood, that evidence is inadmissible.

And the murderer supporters, ie fellow cops at the scene, didn't notice that he was drunk at all at the crash scene. So he faces charges that are much lower than if there was some admissible evidence he was really drunk.

In North Carolina, police arrest a woman for resisting arrest because she watched, and recorded, a traffic stop from her front porch.

CR