Music

Prosecutors appeal anti-paparazzi charge dismissal

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Prosecutors Wednesday appealed the dismissal of anti-paparazzi driving charges against a photographer accused of recklessly chasing Justin Bieber on a Los Angeles freeway earlier this year.

The appeal argues that Superior Court Judge Thomas Rubinson erred last month when he dismissed two counts filed under California's 2010 anti-paparazzi law against Paul Raef, a freelance photographer. The judge dismissed the charges on grounds that the 2010 law used to charge him was overly broad and violates the First Amendment.

The judge's ruling could set "a dangerous precedent" that newsgatherers can drive recklessly without facing stiffer penalties, the prosecutors' filing states. The law raised the penalty for those who drive dangerously in pursuit of photos for commercial gain, but Rubinson said that could be applied to wedding photographers and many other professions.

The offense is punishable by six months in jail and a $2,500 fine but went unused until Raef was involved in the freeway chase of Bieber that topped 80 mph and prompted several 911 calls. Raef's attorneys, David S. Kestenbaum and Brad Kaiserman, said they had not yet been served with the full appeal, including the prosecutors' exhibits, but had reviewed a filing summarizing their arguments.

Prosecutors are mistakenly arguing that the statute regulates conduct instead of speech and the ruling should be upheld, they wrote in a statement. "Judge Rubinson, in ruling that the statute was an overbroad regulation of speech, gave a decision that was appropriate, well-reasoned, and an accurate interpretation of First Amendment law, and we believe that the reviewing court will uphold his decision," Kestenbaum and Kaiserman wrote.

Rubinson said when ruling Nov. 14 that lawmakers should have simply raised the penalties for all types of reckless driving. The appeal states the judge should have deferred to the way California lawmakers decided to target reckless driving by paparazzi.

"It was not the trial court's role to substitute its views for those of the Legislature and strike down a valid statute because it felt there were other 'effective' ways to address the problem," the filing states.

Raef still faces traditional reckless driving charges for the July chase involving Bieber on a freeway. That case is temporarily on hold. Raef has not yet entered a plea. The law used to charge Raef was influenced by the experiences of Jennifer Aniston, who provided details to a lawmaker on being unable to drive away after she was surrounded by paparazzi on Pacific Coast Highway.

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP .

Related Headlines

  • 12-12-12 The Concert for Sandy Relief at Madison Square Garden - Live Concert

    Music, comedy strike defiant tone at Sandy concert

    Musicians were so intent upon helping victims of Superstorm Sandy that they didn't seem to want their benefit concert in New York to end. The final notes of Alicia Keys' ... 

  • Most Googled in 2012: Whitney, PSY, Sandy

    The world's attention wavered between the tragic and the silly in 2012, and along the way, millions of people searched the Web to find out about a royal princess, the latest ... 

  • Lady Gaga

    A look at prolific Twitter accounts

    Pope Benedict XVI hit the 1 million Twitter follower mark on Wednesday as he sent his first tweet from his new account. In amassing an army of followers, the pontiff joined ... 

  • Wiz Khalifa, Amber Rose

    Wiz Khalifa readies music, marriage, fatherhood

    Rapper Wiz Khalifa says preparation for becoming a first-time father and husband has helped put him in a more mature musical state of mind. But that doesn't mean Khalifa will ... 

Popular Searches
Entertainment

Find your future job here

What

Where

Service