The police said the CPS had decided there was sufficient evidence to bring terrorism charges, but it was not in the public interest because they would have received the same sentence as for fraud.
That makes no sense whatsoever. If your real goal is to prevent terrorism or to create a deterrent against terrorism, wouldn't bringing terrorism charges against these guys be a bigger deterrent than cell phone fraud? I think the real reason is that the police didn't think a conviction was possible on terrorism charges, but that they were on the cell phone fraud charges. Just doesn't make any sense otherwise.
Besides, this footage was shot on a cell phone, not an actual camera. If this is about terrorism and this event is the basis for the current wrestling match between photographers and policemen, why aren't there reports about people with cell phones being harassed by police? Why does it seem to only involve photographers with (often very obvious) cameras?
At several protests in the last couple years in England, cameras have recorded police acting outside the rules governing police conduct during interactions with the public. Members of the police department suffered professionally when photographic evidence appeared in court and showed their version of events to be false and the protestors' versions to be correct. This has happened several times in NYC as well, with Critical Mass bicyclists and Republican National Convention demonstrators. I'll wager that the police response to cameras is more the result of some photographer's photos or video produced in court that show the police may be "mis-remembering" events than the direct result of any perceived terrorist threat.
Cameras are inconvenient.
Och if yoo look up "Gherkin Building, London, UK" in Google Maps ye can see re groond floor o' rat building, reception an oll an ye willnae look suspicious an nae polis will bee able tae stop yoo an threaten ye wi arrest by re Special Branch or onywun else f'r rat matter, so ther !!!!!!!
Yep. More holes.