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Editor's Note: This is a first-person account of Bill Lawson's arrest by a
state trooper while attempting to take pictures at a house fire in Maumelle on
Monday evening.
MAUMELLE -- Having lived 59 years, battled cancer, worn
the country's uniform for 26 years and proudly worked as a journalist -- a
profession I always admired -- I thought I'd seen it all. That is until Monday
night, when I was arrested and charged with a criminal offense just for trying
to do my job and take photos of a residential fire in Maumelle.
Being
arrested, searched, having my camera, reporter's notebook and billfold
confiscated, humiliated in front of friends and people I write about every week
was a difficult way to be arrested for the first time in my life. The only other
time I wore a pair of handcuffs was 10 years ago during a training class at the
Law Enforcement Training Academy in Camden.
When I was told that I was
being arrested it seemed like a dream. I knew I'd done nothing wrong. But I knew
better than to argue with a sate trooper who obviously had an
attitude.
Although I was arrested and handcuffed, not once was I read my
rights. In fact, the State Police trooper told me I was being charged with
obstructing governmental operations and one other offense. I can't remember what
the second one was. It was such an incredulous feeling to be stopped from doing
my job, much less to be arrested, that it was difficult to consider what was
really happening.
All I was doing was what Capt. Gloria Weakland, State
Police Troop A commander, advised me to do when I inquired via telephone months
back about a fatality accident near Cabot and talked to her about covering the
news. Capt. Weakland told me that I was welcome at any accident or incident
scene and for me to approach the trooper there and identify myself with the news
media and that I would have access to do my job.
That's all I was trying to do Monday evening. I didn't think the trooper in
Maumelle had seen the press credential on my windshield and I approached him as
she suggested to let him know who I was and why I was there. That's when he said
he was going to arrest me for approaching him. He told me that he saw the press
sign on my windshield and the ID around my neck but that it didn't mean anything
to him.
Life has been difficult for me since my battle with cancer. The
cancer, radiation treatments and multiple surgeries have all left their marks on
me. Thank God I'm cancer-free, but I'm not half the young man who used to run
the 100-yard dash in 10.2 seconds. In fact, this past weekend has been one of
the most painful in my life. The medicine that I still must take often depletes
my potassium and my muscles hurt so badly it's very difficult to move. I
actually have to hold on to something to pull my way in and out of my vehicle so
that I don't generate more pain in my legs. I use my arms and hands as much as
possible to keep from using my legs to even lift me out of chairs because of the
pain.
Of course, being overweight makes it even more difficult. For the
first two years of my battle with cancer, I had to take steroid shots along with
the 18 different kinds of medicine, to even feel like getting out of bed. A
combination of the cancer's damage to my kidneys, bladder and colon and the
steroids added about 100 pounds to my already large frame. But I tell people
everyday that I'd rather be fat and alive than skinny and dead. My physician
tells me that some of the kidney medicine I take contributes to the retention of
fluids in spite of other medicine to help relieve that problem.
The
combination of medical problems and being overweight makes for a slow-moving
wide body. Walking is a chore and an occasional run or climbing stairs leaves me
breathless. After being handcuffed and forced to stand still for more than 30
minutes beside his Arkansas State Police vehicle with unit number A-54 on it, I
couldn't move a muscle. When I squirmed, the trooper was yelling at me to stop
resisting. Standing with my arms behind me was difficult and painful to the
point of being unbearable. I know what resisting is and I did nothing that could
be considered that. The too-tight handcuffs hurt my wrists and I have scratches
from them on my right arm where the trooper hit it while slapping the handcuffs
on me. All of that and the pain of standing still for so long was unbearable,
but I knew better than to complain or suffer the trooper's wrath.
His
demeanor was abusive, intimidating and downright scary.
Some of my
friends on the Maumelle Fire Department came over to check on me. I was still 50
to 75 yards away from the minor fire and they all wondered what was going on.
They asked if they could help and I told my publisher's son-in-law, who is a
firefighter, to call him in case I needed to be bailed out of jail. The firemen
later told me they couldn't believe I had been arrested for attempting to take
photos far away from the fire. In fact, they called the Maumelle Police
Department to come and check on me because they said they were worried about
me.
After my boss' son-in-law left, the trooper came over and asked if I
was somebody special. I told him no, I'm just a reporter. Then he wanted to know
whom I asked the fireman to call and I explained that it was my boss. He then
asked which newspaper I worked for and I tried to explain that I worked for
several newspapers owned by Stephens Media. He wanted to argue with me, telling
me I'd mentioned a specific newspaper earlier. Every time I tried to explain,
the trooper would interrupt me, like a trial attorney would do when they're
trying to discredit you.
I wanted to tell him that I needed to sit down
but I was afraid he'd charge me with something else, or worse. After all, he had
the gun and authority of a state trooper and I was just a journalist with a
notepad and a camera. As mad as he was, I feared for my safety. He had roughed
me up a little bit, pulling my left hand behind my back and then demanding that
I let go of the camera in my right hand. I wasn't about to drop a $1,500 camera
with a $400 strobe light on it. He grabbed it and yelled at me until I let it
go. He took it, walked off behind me and later placed the camera on the trunk of
his vehicle.
After he visited with several Maumelle police officers, he
came up to me and asked me, "If I take these handcuffs off you, are you going to
behave?"
I was stunned. From the moment he told me to turn around because
I was under arrest for taking his photo, I attempted to follow his every command
for fear of what he might do. I was handcuffed and defenseless. Not that I'd
have tried to resist; I have too much respect for law enforcement officers to do
that, even when I know I didn't do anything wrong.
As I was handcuffed,
he tried to tell me that I'd stuck the camera "up in my face, inches from my
nose, snapping it over and over attempting to blind me." I tried to explain that
the camera had been set on motor drive in order to capture the firefighters in
action and that I had actually only snapped it once. He wanted to argue and said
that I held it down for 10 seconds or longer, telling me that he knew all about
cameras.
Even hours after the arrest, it all seems like a dream. A very
bad dream. Maumelle Police Chief Sam Williams told me that I should file a
complaint against the state trooper. I told him that wasn't my style because I
have so much respect for all police officers and the difficult jobs they
do.
I've worked closely with state troopers and count many of them as
friends. In April 2006 when a trooper sergeant died out on a roadblock, I was so
inspired when I attended his funeral in Searcy that I wrote a newspaper column
tribute to him and all troopers, entitled "The Thin Blue Line," that ended up
being reprinted in the Arkansas State Police Association's
magazine.
After the episode, Chief Williams told me he might have yelled
at me if he thought I'd overstepped my bounds, but he said he certainly wouldn't
have arrested me for just doing my job.
Standing on a public street in a
city where I've covered much more serious fires than this one, I couldn't have
believed that my First Amendment rights to cover and report the news would have
been abridged. Even worse than the painful handcuffing episode, the state
trooper turned me around so that I could not even see the firefighters in action
putting out the fire. That was adding insult to injury. Now I can't even report
on their outstanding efforts to save a home -- because I wasn't allowed to see
it and I can't report what I didn't see.
Bill Lawson covers Pulaski
County government for Stephens Media's Central Arkansas Newspapers, but
currently is assigned to Maumelle.
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