Another photographer receives five-figure settlement in New York
Former New York Post photographer Rick Dembow received a $45,000 settlement from the City of New York for agreeing to drop his lawsuit against the New York Police Department.
Dembow was arrested in June 2004 at the scene of a hit and run accident when he saw an officer arresting fellow photographer Peter Foley. According to a press release from the National Press Photographers Association last month:
Shortly afterwards Rick Dembow sustained an asthma attack in the back seat of a police car where the windows had been rolled up despite the outside heat, as well as injuries to his wrist from overly tightened handcuffs behind his back. The news photographer was taken to a 19th precinct holding cell and then by ambulance to a local hospital for treatment of an asthma attack, where he was left handuffed to a hospital bed.
The story of the settlement was broken by Your Free Press, a New York news blog operated by
Additionally, New York State Workers Compensation Judge Nance Kaplan ruled that the York Post must pay the photographer $20,000 in lost wages due to the assignment injury. The Post initially protested the compensation claiming the photojournalist was a freelancer and not entitled to any benefits. News Corp. sent Photo Editor David Boyle to testify against any compensation, but Judge Kaplan found Boyle’s argument to be not credible and unsupportive.
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Earlier this month, photographer Duane Kerzic won a five-figure settlement from Amtrak after the story of his arrest for photographing trains was aired on The Colbert Report, according to the New York Press Photographers Association.
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Comments
Another one. Nice.
Is there any hard evidence that these settlements are resulting in something other than early retirements for the plaintiffs?
I mean, when are we going to start hearing about the new training policies of the major metropolitan police departments? When are we going to stop seeing this kind of abuse of power again and again?
The truth is, cities like NY and Miami have lots of money to give away in settlements rather than fight battles in court that may lead to permanent changes in policy (or at least lead to enforcing current policy). The reason wealthy entities settle is to “make the problem go away.”
Apparently no one has the fortitude to actually see these lawsuits all the way to their bitter end.
Fighting the good fight … right up until payday.
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