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"This was not about someone asking questions, it was about physical actions. Other reporters there asked questions without taking physical action ... [Heyman] crossed a line," said Capitol Police spokesman Lawrence Messina.
"Dan was consistent at the level other people were speaking at," Woody said. "It didn't sound like he was being aggressive... I'm just really disturbed that a reporter's First Amendment rights were curtailed when he was just trying to do his job."
Text“The individual repeatedly tried to push his way past secret service agents who were providing for the safety and security for an event at the state capitol,” Messina said. “There were other reporters present who asked questions without incident.”
originally posted by: Liquesence
originally posted by: DISRAELI
a reply to: Liquesence
Apparently the point at issue was the manner of the questioning.
If there was physical harassment, that is usually a legal offence even in a public place.
The manner of questioning apparently was the volume and the tactic of not relenting the questioning, neither of which are against the law to my knowledge.
If there was physical harassment, that would be noted by a charge of some kind other than "disruption of government process."
It's a BS charge, seemingly because he was annoying Price by his lawful persistence.
I fyou need a comment make a official appointment like a normal human being.