Texas TV reporter arrested for doing his job


A TV reporter for a southern Texas news station was arrested Thursday after pulling up to the scene of an accident that resulted from police chasing a car filled with marijuana.

Victor Castillo pulled up to the scene with other reporters, including a videographer who was harassed himself and who ended up capturing the arrest on video.

Police ordered Victor Castillo away from the scene, even though he was not in the immediate area nor was there any crime scene tape up.

This is how his employer, KGBT TV, explains it:

When first confronted, Victor moved further away to try and continue to tell the story.

The officer decided that was still not good enough, even though you’ll see in the video that there were many members of the public present in the same area.

Victor was embarrassed and humiliated before many members of the public.

He was told he was being arrested for failure to identify.

But later when the charges were formally written he was accused and arraigned for allegedly interfering with public duties, a Class B misdemeanor punishable up to six months in jail and a $2,000 fine.

As usual, cops had no legitimate charges to arrest him, so they had to wait until later before they could come up with something they could tell the judge.

Check out the video here.

Comments

Anonymous
Anonymous

Good story Carlos.
Just a small thing that may have a bit of a grammar issue. “including a videographer who has harassed himself”. A videographer harassing himself? I don’t know, that doesn’t sound quite right, maybe I looked at it wrong.

Anonymous
Anonymous

You’re right, Scott. I was in a rush when I wrote this because I had to go somewhere. I just got home.

I meant to write “was harassed”.

Thanks for pointing it out.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Will police never learn to just leave the law-abiding citizens alone? I got bored one day and read a bunch of your blog posts, and my head is spinning from all the harassment I’ve been reading about.

Anonymous
Anonymous

This is total crap on the departments behalf. The department needs to look into their leadership if this kind of thing is common. I will acknowledge the shooter was not the nicest in the world but he is justified. The cop’s reaction is incredulous. He has the what your going to tell my boss big deal attitude…. The scene was COLD so don’t give me the active investigation blah…. There is no tape up, and an excess of officers standing around doing nothing while the shooter is 30 yards back and he still get hassled ? Carlos, myself or any other daily newspaper shooter or tv cameraman can tell you that the PD would have called the city desk to brag on their catch if their was no one at the scene and want a photog sent to the station to shoot the dope…

How long before someone looks into legislation that makes it a misdemeanor for the police or the public to interfere with a member of the media while they are covering a story. (I know this is never going to happen but hey if you can tell google its got to make blurry buildings there is always how)

Anonymous
Anonymous

it seem that one those small pricks so-called police get a badge it goes to their heads, they think that they have carte blanc to do what they want.

I think those who want to be a police office need to have a BA in public relations before they can get a badge.. The truth is that cities will hire anyone who as a clear background period.. that is the only requirement.

Anonymous
Anonymous

The funny thing about this is that the only way to “fail to identify” in Texas, is to be under arrest to begin with. Case in point, in Sec. 38.02. Failure to Identify. of the Texas Penal Code explicitly states
“(a) A person commits an offense if he intentionally refuses to give his name, residence address, or date of birth to a peace officer who has lawfully arrested the person and requested the information.”
So lets see…if an officer just starts chatting me up and asks my name (i.e., a conversation & I can leave at any time), I don’t have to provide that information. Lets say that I’m legally detained (i.e., terry stop), I STILL don’t have to provide that – I just can’t “[...]intentionally give[s] a false or fictitious name, residence address, or date of birth to a peace officer[...]” when legally detained. Finally, lets say that I am arrested; I must provide this information (I don’t have to have the identification credentials, just provide the information). Refusing to provide that information leaves me open to more charges that might not end up getting dropped if the original charge is proved to be bogus and/or dismissed.

To offer a bit of a different view, why did the station post the video on their website as the “raw” video, despite obvious editing and deletion of segments. Raw is just that, it is unedited, unchanged from its original content. Several commenters on the news site portrayed the camera man is being rude and insulting to the police and standing far closer than any other reporters. Unfortunately, due to the station’s editing, it is unclear how the reporter was behaving.

In any event, the way the police responded was not correct. Just because they have the capability to wield their police powers doesn’t mean they need to give into their emotions and do what they want. Its unfortunate, but the police generally don’t seem to believe that they need to hold themselves to a much higher standard than their fellow citizens, applied to both their demeanor and how they execute their office’s powers. Maybe working in the customer service industry for the past several years has glued me to the ideal that “I must always be polite, and another person’s inability to do so is no excuse for me to lower my standard for my own conduct; that is my pride as a human being.”

FYI, I looked up the Texas status for Failure to Identify after I had a run-in with a sheriff deputy I was taking pictures of (I mean come on, who parks their off-duty vehicle at the bottom of a T intersection with their red-and-blues flashing with no-one around for over 30 minutes?). When his backup had arrived and they were ‘sorting things out’ he told me offhandedly “I should take you to county (county jail) for Failure to Idenity” I had to work hard not to laugh. After I got home I double checked myself and found I was in the right. That notwithstanding, the twit of a deputy called the FBI on me and I had a nice little chat with them.

Anonymous
Anonymous

The segement about the reporter bieng arrested.

I feel that the police officer that harrassed the reporter should be demoted to a 911 response phone operater.
I also feel that police officers like him are poor role models and its officers like him who give good ones a bad rap.
Wouldn’t suprise me if you read about that police officers obituary in the news if he keeps that kind of unprofessional attitude.

Fed Up!
Chuck.

Anonymous
Anonymous

You reporters are just so annoying. I would think you would sell your soul if you thought the story was good enough. Why don’t you actually report something positive going on in your area. The world can only get more depressed with your reports. I hope your stories are worth it.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Cyrus…..Do you not know how important a reporters job is? Without the news how would people know what the heck is going on in the world? Reporters stories are depressing because well for one have you not looked outside into the world? War, Murders…..the worlds depressing, so therefor the stories will also be as well.

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