B.C. teen arrested for photographing mall takedown

truther October 29, 2012 7

Eric Rankin and Enza Uda | Cbc

A B.C. teen who aspires to be a journalist says his rights were violated when he was set upon by security guards and then arrested by police after photographing an incident at Metrotown shopping mall in Burnaby, B.C.

Jakub Markiewicz ,16, said he was in the mall in September and took a picture of what he thought was a newsworthy event — a man being arrested by security guards.

Security guards pin a man at Metrotown mall in an incident that led to a confrontation with the photographer. (Jakub Markiewicz)

But Markiewicz said the guards quickly turned on him, demanding he delete the photo, which he couldn’t do because he was shooting on a film camera.

Markiewicz said he turned to leave the mall and then snapped a second shot as RCMP arrived.

He said the security guards held him, attempting to grab his camera, and he was pushed to the ground. He said he then tried to use his body to protect two cameras he carried in his bag.

“They’re just yelling and screaming, and just telling me to stop resisting,” Markiewicz said.

He admits he started swearing and was then handcuffed by police and taken outside the mall to an RCMP cruiser by the officers and mall security.

Markiewicz said the guards again demanded he delete the photos and he told them once more he couldn’t.

Backpack cut off

He said the Mounties could not remove his backpack while he was handcuffed so they cut it off his back with a utility knife and searched it.

“I was like, just perplexed. I was like, ‘What’s going on here, why am I being treated like this?’”

Burnaby RCMP say Markiewicz was arrested for causing a disturbance, but was not charged. He has, however, been banned from Metrotown mall for six months.

The teen’s father, Zbigniew Markiewicz, said mall security and police completely over-reacted.

“There’s no real threat to anyone by having a camera and snapping a picture,” he said.

Lawyer Douglas King, of Pivot Legal in Vancouver, agrees, saying that private mall security guards and police have no right to try to seize someone’s camera or demand that photos be deleted — even on private property.

No questions asked

King said that too often, police take the side of guards, with no questions asked.

“They need to be able to look at this with a cool head, separate the parties, and really give a fair analysis to both sides, not put a kid in handcuffs and take him to a police cruiser,” King said.

Metrotown mall backs the actions of its security guards.

“He didn’t comply with the request of the security nor the RCMP, so they took appropriate action they deemed necessary to defuse the situation,” said Doug MacDougall, of Metrotown Properties. MacDougall said that Markiewicz was told that he couldn’t take pictures inside the mall.

King said the province needs better oversight of security guards.

Justice Minister Shirley Bond told CBC News that current legislation contains adequate measures to ensure appropriate oversight of the security guard industry, but said that oversight is a big job.

“Remember, there are 22,000 licensed security personnel that are doing their job every day — there are situations that will happen, but we have a process to deal with that, as do the police,” Bond said in an email.

Justice ministry spokeswoman Tasha Schollen said there had been 371 complaints related to the security industry filed since the beginning of 2011. Schollen said 22 of the complaints related to use of force and of those, five have led to “enforcement action.”

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7 Comments »

  1. Robert Smiley October 30, 2012 at 3:58 am - Reply

    Well at least I know what mall never to visit again. Whoever this fool Doug McDougall is he should keep his fat mouth closed when he doesn't know what transpired. It was the mall security that caused the situation when this kid did not comply with an illegal demand by the guards. I personally think it is lawsuit time so these mall managers find out they can't just get customers thrown in jail because they like doing it.

  2. Patricia Ann Cowan October 30, 2012 at 2:30 am - Reply

    Have a question about this, not taking sides but in this day and age where videos and/or photos can be put on the net…is it a privacy issue to not photograph someone being arrested or as the boy said a newsworthy incident? What if the person that was being detained or whatever was innocent and then the store gets sued for photos going all over the net. I realize he couldn't delete the photos because it wasn't that type of cammera but were the guards trying to protect the store and maybe following orders to have no photos taken?

  3. Rodger Weir October 29, 2012 at 10:59 pm - Reply
  4. Joan Christopher Rodriguez October 29, 2012 at 6:21 pm - Reply

    Its stupid shit like this that makes the world shittier. Security guards acquire a huge ego, thinking they run the place.

  5. Miriam Kucera October 29, 2012 at 4:51 pm - Reply

    this is happenned to my son , he was handcufft and left for tree hours in the rain for misstake they did he is 16….

  6. David Frobel October 29, 2012 at 12:50 pm - Reply

    crazy,,, whot are the gards hiding,, so whot if the kid wants to take pictures,, its a free country or so they say.

  7. Imaj Walker October 29, 2012 at 11:36 am - Reply

    No, this shouldn't be happening in Canada. Why aren't people enraged?

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