A Seattle
man says a motherland safety officer provoked him Thursday by following him and
appearing to take close-up pictures or video of him while a confidential safety
protector did the similar. The disconcerting come crossways was posted online.
This was solitude
protester Phil Mocek’s subsequent contact with uniformed establishment in as
many days. He said that Wednesday, a plainclothes federal manager momentarily
seized his camera after he took a picture from a community sidewalk of what
appeared to be unmarked or individual vehicles parked in a row of spaces kept
for law enforcement outside the Henry M. Jackson Federal Building in the
downtown region.
Soon after
taking the photo, a white truck that was parked in one of the spots troop by
him, pulled a U-turn and parked crooked in the street, Mocek said. That’s when
a man got out of the vehicle and grabbed his camera, he said.
The man recognized
himself as an agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. He began
going throughout the pictures on the camera, Mocek said, as an officer from the
Federal defensive Service of Homeland safety and a personal security protector
who works at the federal building watched. When the agent finally returned the
camera, one of the images was remove.
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