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Freelancer Wins Settlement Against LAPD After Gathering Photos of Officers

 For 29-year-old freelance journalist Ben Camacho, it's two legal victories in two days. On Monday, the city of Los Angeles agreed to drop its lawsuit against Camacho and a nonprofit advocacy group over hundreds of photographs of Los Angeles Police Department officers, which it claims were "inadvertently" handed over to Camacho when it fulfilled a public records act request, Courthouse News reports. As part of the settlement, which still needs to be approved by City Council, the city will pay $300,000 in defense attorney fees. On Tuesday, Camacho won a second dismissal a similar lawsuit against him on free speech grounds. "It's clearly protected activity, protected by the First Amendment, as it relates to his role as a journalist," said Superior Court Judge David Cunningham. Camacho was working as a freelancer in 2021 when he filed a public records act request for "the most up-to-date roster of LAPD names, badge numbers, serial numbers, division, sworn status" of every LAPD officer, as well as their headshots. The police department fulfilled most of the request, but withheld the photos.


Camacho sued for the photos, and eventually, the city agreed to hand over more than 9,000 headshots on a zip drive. As part of the settlement, the city said it was excluding photos of cops in an "undercover capacity." Camacho handed over the photos and the information to the nonprofit activist group, Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, which it used to create a searchable database of nearly every cop in LA — Watch the Watchers. The website enraged the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which said the database included "the names and photographs of officers engaged in sensitive investigative assignments, placing their lives and the lives of their families in extreme jeopardy and peril." The league then sued the city, calling the photos' release "one of the worst security breaches in recent memory." Even Mayor Karen Bass called the debacle "an egregious mistake." After the city sued Camacho and the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition, the league dropped its suit. Later, more than 140 anonymous officers who say they have "worked recently in either an undercover or surveillance capacity" filed their own lawsuit against the city, saying they fear retribution from criminals they have helped prosecute. The city then filed its second complaint against Camacho and the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition as a cross-complainant in the officers' lawsuit.

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