News7 mins ago
Angry with myself...
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yesterday i went to heaton park with my friend and her two year old little girl, wewere sat on the grass when an oldish guy takes a picture i thought he took it over us but he then moved forward and said let me get a closer one of you, shocked and in disbelief i told him you cannot take pics of kids without there parents consent he backtracked then saying he was taking it of me and my friend and i told him we aint given permission either and he said well if thats the way you feel and deleted them im sure he didnt delete both. But my friend if she was on her own is shy and wouldnt have said anything, im so angry i didnt take the camera off him and smash it but my partner said he could have had anything in his pockets and hurt us but still feel angry about not doing more i was just so shocked.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I can sympathise with your feelings, however you cannot take someones property from them and smash it. If you did that then you!!!! would be in the wrong, possibly with the police pressing charges against you. Remember, you only suspect that he was only taking photo's of youer friends little girl and that he didn't delete them you need proof, and then report him to the police.
you did the right thing by confronting him, perhaps you should alert the police about him and give them a description of what he lookee like, clothes he was wearing etc?
you did the right thing by confronting him, perhaps you should alert the police about him and give them a description of what he lookee like, clothes he was wearing etc?
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Ethel is right. When my friend and I were about 16 her mom took us to a pool. An old man was shooting video under the water. When we complained the staff said he was allowed to do that. Of course we were whisked from the pool by friend's mom.
Now I wish someone would want my bootom in a bathing suit on film.LOL
Now I wish someone would want my bootom in a bathing suit on film.LOL
I wouldn't be much inclined to report the incident at all, though I would have refused permission for close-ups. But my own camera has a zoom, so I can take close-ups without actually being near people, and I do, sometimes even of children. I'm not a pervert, just an amateur photographer. The world is full of them; there are far more photographers than paedophiles. Other people just taking photos doesn't bother me in the least, though I'd be more protective of my child than of myself. Anyway, since this guy made himself known, I wouldn't be scared of him at all, and I certainly wouldn't have been wanting to smash his camera. There's no need to feel violence towards anyone who looks at you.
Ok so it's not illegal to take photos, but this bloke obviously made you feel uncomfortable. If you report it to the police they will check to see if anything similar has been reported and if so this might be the extra they need. Don't be concerned about the photographer - if he is innocent the worst that will happen is he'll get a shock and it'll probably make him think twice before being so intrusive in future (and you'll save his camera - cos I for one would have smashed it)
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You've just reminded me of something I read in my local paper.
http://www.shropshirestar.co.uk/2006/09/air-sh ow-mans-photo-shame/
http://www.shropshirestar.co.uk/2006/09/air-sh ow-mans-photo-shame/