Given that eyewitnesses rarely agree even in the simple cases outlined by Tony earlier I would be highly suspicious of blanket agreement in scenarios where it's just not possible to see what's happening more than a few metres away.
Last edited by chaggle; 16th December 2010 at 10:48 AM.
Perhaps a sports analogy is not the best. Whilst Smudge did change the scenario from what we typically view with modern interactive tv it's difficult to shake our experiences that the TV cameras often have the best view in the house. (Thought it doesn't compare for atmosphere vs actual attendance)
No one analysing such a video would make any assumptions about what it does NOT show. But we can assume that the bits it DOES show are far more accurate than any witness testimony of the same events. Just look at how often referees are made fools of by TV replays even from just one angle.
Multiple witnesses are not much better than individual ones. When witnesses are together they tend to confer, swap stories and produce a consensus view of what they saw and then start to believe it! They will all tell you they saw the same thing even though a TV camera shows you they were all wrong!BUT; there are many witnesses. The witness accounts of all players, spectators, match officials, management teams, and stewards contribute to the evidence. In fact, considering their views would be vital to get any real idea of what actually happened in the game. Including minor points like the score!
Of course all evidence is considered but it must be weighted by reliability and a TV camera beats eyewitnesses easily. I regard even the best eyewitness evidence, extracgted through cognitive interviewing, as merely a rough guide. Misperception happens even before a witness is consciously aware of seeing anything so even with an accurate memory, they may simply not have seen what they thought they did. And then there is confabulation and suggestion to consider!All the evidence must be considered.
Obviously there are problems with cameras as well but these are generally well-known and can be taken into account. The problemsd with eye witnesses are far greater and not so well-known.
The point is that a camera has known limitations that can be accounted for. Eyewitnesses, by comparison, have far more biases from perception to memory, which can only partly be compensated for. Ultimately, what we see in our heads is an illusion created by our brains based on experience, suggestion, bias, sensory input (from multiple senses) and so on. We are very far from neutral recorders of our surroundings. Personally, I would ban uncorroborated eyewitness evidence from court rooms because it is too unreliable. It is interesting how, when faced with CCTV evidence, many people in police custody admit what they did straight away, despite having previously protested their innocence for hours or days.Yes, humans are bias. We know this! This is why conclusions based on limited evidence should not be jumped to! We must be open to the idea that our view, our assumptions, are wrong. They so often are.
Yes. I've experienced that myself (not in a riot context).
The main issue I have with the video evidence as presented to us by the traditional media is not the accuracy of little clips, but are we seeing the whole story?
As has been mentioned by someone else, fighting during the miners strike was shown in the wrong order to make it look as if the police were responding to having objects thrown at them, when the reality was that they charged a peaceful picket line and ran away, then the miners started throwing things at them.
I saw the same thing at the big Welling march against the BNP that ended up on the front pages of the tabloids. The agreed route of the march was blocked, the people further back kept moving forwards even though the front of the march couldn't go anywhere, after half an hour there still hadn't been any throwing anything or fighting, the police charged from a side road into the side of the demo on horses with battons attacking peaceful protesters. People started throwing things. When I got home I saw nothing on TV but demonstrators throwing things. Anyone who watched the BBC news will have been given the clear impression that the marchers started it, then the police reacted. Anyone who read a tabloid newspaper article the next day will have seen outright lies.
So a clip of a rioter smashing a window is fine in as far as it identifies that idiot as having committed a crime, but what else happened first? Were the police standing around watching the attack on the Treasury Building without doing anything? Why?
The live footage with lots of helicopter shots was actually very useful in allowing the bigger picture to be seen. the fact that the public were enclosed and being pushed around before the trouble kicked off was clearly seen. Later highlights on the news allow a wider interpretation, and police spokespeople are allowed to lie about the sequence of events unchallenged creating a "two sides to the story" impression.
The problem remains if a large number of people who were there believe that the wrong story is being told, using selective video evidence and - police eyewitness accounts to colour the sequence of events, then a sense of injustice grows.
They may of course be wrong, but they are no more likely to be wrong than police witnesses, I would argue that in general those whose jobs and colleagues jobs are on the line are more likely to ensure that the account they give is professionally manicured
to give a 'correct' impression, so adding bias to unreliability.
I wouldn't give any more weight to police eyewitness evidence than anyone else's. I wouldn't give it less than the protesters, though - they too had their own agenda (especially those determined on disruption). Which brings me back to the same point; for all of its acknowledged problems, video evidence is far superior to eye witnesses.
That is quite incorrect again. The video footage and the live coverage showed the start of the trouble quite unequivocally. A mob broke from the march and stormed onto the grassed area of Parliament Square, dismantling barricades as they went. Others charged the police cordon at the end of Victoria Street, attacking them with placards and improvised clubs - police who were not wearing any protective gear at all. That was the point where the first police reaction took place - the police at the cordon were ordered to draw their batons. The crowd was not kettled at that point in any way; the exit onto Whitehall - the only approved route - remained open for a considerable time after this point. The kettling began after several efforts on the part of the mob to break through each of the cordons onto the other unapproved exits from Parliament Square.
I have not heard any police spokesman say anything which is inconsistent with what I saw on the live coverage and, later, the recorded coverage from several independent sources. Many of the statements of protesters, on the other hand, were absolute bullshit - as will be seen in the coming months as individual cases come before the courts complete with news video, CCTV and forensic evidence.
Like most here, I have reservations about kettling, but to blame it for the trouble last Thursday is nonsense. It was a reaction to a very serious outbreak of violence, not the cause. It may well have made things worse within the contained area - but it limited most of the damage to that one area so it achieved something. Does that justify its use? I don't know.
Last edited by brianp; 16th December 2010 at 12:39 PM.
The question arises whether this is the correct weighting. It is commonly held that organisations have a more coherent approach to ensuring that the correct story is told than individuals. Professionals have done this before, they know how their story will be probed, they know which kinds of answers shut down inquiry, which lead to exposure of inconsistencies. The recognise the importance of avoiding contradiction between accounts etc. It is common to have pre-meetings to ensure that the stories told are consistent with each other etc.
Now from the inside this may seem like sensible preparations, but it can easily be construed as conspiratorial. While the average anarchist might wish to influence others to share his/her view point, they cannot bring this level of professionalism to their efforts.
Congratulations on an excellent post proving the point about how unreliable some people's memories are of events that happened quite recently. I have to say that I wonder if you really were watching events unfold live as nothing you have said in any of your posts has been remotely close to what was actually shown on TV. Perhaps your memory is just in-filling what you wanted to have happened.
Really Bob, now you're just being offensive. As someone else said - you're entitled to your own opinion, but not to your own facts. Find a decent time-line and you'll see the sequence of events were as I stated - the invasion and occupation of Parliament Square ~2:15, violent attacks against police lines ~3:20, first indication of kettling ~3:40. I've presented my recollection of the live coverage and subsequent BBC and Sky News reports as accurately as I can - I don't think I've distorted anything.
To be clear; I was not there and never claimed to be.
But yes, partial, incomplete or edited footage often misleads.
EXACTLY!
All witnesses are biased. All of us. The best we can hope for is to be aware and skeptical enough of our own views.
Exactly.
The detectives used the witnesses testimonies as EVIDENCE. They were aware they had to be skeptical. But aware that it was evidence. Without it they would have had no clue. With partial camera coverage the witnesses would still have been vital.
ALL evidence must be considered. Skeptically. But we must be skeptical about TV coverage as well as witnesses.
No such thing Tony.
We are ALL biased. We all are flawed. We all have upbringing, experience, pet hates and confirmation bias engrained.
Not worthless. Not anywhere near perfect either, I agree. But as my limited footie camera analogy showed (or tried to!), a limited coverage by camera misses important details . Like goals.
Depending on how misleading the footage it is and what other evidence tells us when viewed skeptically.
But I think thats exactly what happens with much TV coverage.
Many see protesters fighting coppers and assume, "must be the protesters fault ENTIRELY".
My point is that the limited TV coverage does not, cannot, show whether any provocation took place. Balancing the TV coverage, eyewitness accounts and personal experiences of kettling and police attitudes and behaviour in similar circumstances I strongly suspect that it did.
I'd hope people were aware of those limitations too Harry.
Last edited by smudge; 16th December 2010 at 06:22 PM. Reason: Garbled point
I'm talking about comparing the reliability of video recordings versus eye witnesses rather than TV coverage. If viewers are assuming protesters are at fault it just illustrates the unreliability of eye witnesses.
We should never expect TV to produce a complete, unbiased version of any news event, even with the best will of the reporters and editors involved. However, if there is a formal enquiry into these events then all the TV recordings, plus CCTV recordings and any videos made by protesters should be pieced together and analysed. These should, in my view, override any eyewitness testimony of the filmed events. For any unfilmed events that happened at the same time, for which there is only uncorroborated eye witness testimony, it would have to be left up to a jury to decide but, personally, I would discount it.My point is that the limited TV coverage does not, cannot, show whether any provocation took place. Balancing the TV coverage, eyewitness accounts and personal experiences of kettling and police attitudes and behaviour in similar circumstances I strongly suspect that it did.
In my experience, some eye witnesses ARE better than others. They are the ones who understand their own limitations, have the least bias about the events and are most experienced in viewing similar situations. But even then, we ALL misperceive and confabulate to some degree so even the best observers can get it wrong.
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