And what is this expectation of privacy that would prohibit someone from taking pictures of others? So far no law that I know of says there is.
People have the right to take photographs of people in public. But, society greatly determines what is and isn't acceptable and what does and doesn't constitute privacy at times.
I'll give you an example of expectation of privacy. In public shelters, the department of social services and other agencies will request that residents not take photographs of other people without consent forms.
I use this example when teaching - someone snaps a photograph of a woman and her children and posts it on a social media site not knowing that this woman is estranged from an abusive spouse who is stalking her. There's a safety, risk and liability issue to consider for all residents. Consent forms are encouraged as a protective measure.
You cannot prohibit someone from taking a photograph, but, safety and privacy issues must be considered.
But they were arrested before any suspected use could have been put into effect. Mere suspicion that one will commit a crime isn't good enough reason for arresting a person.
Arrest and conviction aren't one in the same.
The man in Early, Texas was reported by multiple people to have been following children and taking pictures. The photographs, per law enforcement, suggested that he may have been stalking such children. Parents had complained. Workers at the mall had complained.
If he's innocent, he should walk. Stalking isn't legal. If his actions suggested that he was stalking children - police were doing their job.
Photographs of girls in a mall or at a swimming meet are pornographic? Not in my book. The police overreacted.
The man in Early, Texas didn't have just photographs of those girls on his phone, Skwim. The police were responding to multiple complaints and concerns.
Photographs of girls in bathing suits could be construed as a violation of privacy, particularly if the photographs that he took zeroed in on body parts.
Did you catch this from the article that you posted about the guy taking video of girls at the pool?
When police were called to investigate, they found numerous pictures and videos of young females and children involved in sex acts on Winn’s phone.
The evidence found on the man's phone was evidence enough for an arrest.
Which could be said of any act. The ice cream man gave the children ice cream cones so he could befriend them and then bop them on the head later on. All kinds of silly "could be" suspicions can be concocted , but unless such an activity takes place that's all they are, which isn't enough to arrest anyone.
I'm not sure that the examples that you've provided, at least, suggest that police were out of line for making an arrest.
Stalking children isn't legal. Child pornography isn't legal. Videotaping children's backsides in a manner that concerns parents enough to take action is likely illegal.
If a jury disagrees...fine. I think that police were doing their jobs.
If they mere pictures of children outdoors explain how they are.
"In law enforcement circles, the term pedophile is sometimes used in a broad manner to encompass a person who commits one or more sexually-based crimes that relate to legally underage victims. These crimes may include child sexual abuse, statutory rape, offenses involving child pornography, child grooming, stalking, and indecent exposure."
source: Wikipedia
It's exploitation of a child, at least.
Unless you're ready to define fully clothed girls visiting a mall and girls participating at a swimming meet as pornographic, your point here dead in the water.
You're ignoring the rest of the article that you posted. The photographs themselves may not have been a problem at all, if people didn't feel threatened by his behavior and weren't concerned that he was stalking the kids.
Taking photographs of girls at a swm meet doesn't have to be pornographic at all, but, when you choose to zero in on their body parts and concern parents enough to where they react to what you're doing - a line has been crossed.
A man snapping photographs of girls at a pool isn't necessarily wrongful until it begins to concerns people and the police find child pornography on your phone.
First of all, your morality isn't everybody's morality. And moral differences aren't issues of law.
Morality, when accepted by the majority within a society can influence the law.
Secondly, how is this exploitation of children harmful to them? I've seen pictures of children taken in the public that have been exploited to a great extent and nothing was thought of it.
If it causes pain, it's harmful. I had a friend whose husband went to prison for possession and distribution of child pornography. He wrote about doing heinous things to his own children. Whether or not he physically acted upon these things or not doesn't negate the abusive impact of his actions upon his children.
I imagine that such impacts spans a spectrum. If people are none the wiser, I suppose that they can't be impacted by something that they're unaware of. But, that doesn't make the act itself any less abusive in its nature. The intent is to self-gratify. The reality is that one is utilizing an image without consent, which is of concern, at least to me as I'm sure it would be to other parents.
Granted that a picture may, in the future, be used to a child's detriment, but until that time they can't be judged as harmful. Mere suspicion of future misuse, just isn't enough.
Clearly, the videos and photographs mentioned in the articles that you posted were part of the issue. And in one case, the man did have child pornography on his phone. How is it unreasonable to assume that he didn't intend to snap such photos for unlawful purposes?