Man asks court to dismiss charges for recording cop


By Tim White

FALL RIVER, Mass. (WPRI) – Lawyers for a man who was arrested for recording a Fall River police officer on a public street asked a judge to dismiss the charges, but an agreement fell apart at the last minute.
George Thompson, 51, of Fall River, was arrested Jan. 6 and charged with violating the state’s wiretap statute and resisting arrest. He will be back in court on April 11 because prosecutors said they wanted to run the details by District Attorney Sam Sutter before signing off on any deal.
A spokesperson for Sutter declined to comment because the case was ongoing.
Thompson said he was using his iPhone to record Officer Thomas Barboza talking on his cell phone and swearing while working a construction detail. According to an arrest report Barboza claims Thompson was attempting to conceal his phone. Thompson disputes that saying he had arm out holding the phone.
In court Thursday Thompson’s attorney Daniel Igo said a federal appeals court case should be considered in throwing out the charges.
But Judge Joseph Macey was skeptical about applying the federal ruling known as the “Glick” case, where the First Circuit Court of Appeals sided with a Boston lawyer who was arrested for recording police officers in a public location.
“I’m not satisfied with the Glick case,” he said. “That’s a federal case.”
For Macey, he said it boiled down to one question “was it secret or wasn’t it?”
The Massachusetts State Supreme Court ruled against a civilian in a 2001 case where they upheld a charge against a man who recorded an Abington officer in secret.
The video Thompson shot would likely clear up the dispute, but the recording disappeared while the phone was in an evidence room at the police station.
In an interview with Fall River Police Chief Daniel Racine earlier this month, he said they have served a search warrant on the Apple Corporation to try and determine what happened.
“If a Fall River police officer erased that video, he’s fired and I would suspect the district attorney would take out charges,” Racine said. “If any other individual did that, we will take out felony charges.”
According to a court document police suspect Thompson erased the video himself remotely.
“It is plausible that the owner of the phone performed a remote factory restore through the iCloud while the phone was in the evidence vault,” according to the court filing.
Thompson said the last thing he wanted was for the evidence to disappear.
“The chief keeps pointing fingers,” Thompson said. “The chief needs to look within the police department.”
Barboza was disciplined after he admitted to talking on his cell phone during a work detail, according to Racine. He was placed on a one day unpaid suspension and forbidden to work details for 15 days.
Thompson – who filed the complaint against the officer – called the discipline a “slap in the face.”
“A five year-old in school would get a more severe discipline,” he said.