Jess Hurd's center page pictures in The Guardian on Saturday 13 December 2008. Later on she was detained under the Terrorism Act. Published here by kind permission of Jess Hurd/reportdigital.co.uk. (c) Jess Hurd, 2008.
“Terrorism Act cited over wedding photos” - pressgazette.co.uk
“Photographer mulls legal action” - AP
“Photographer at wedding accused of taking pictures for terrorists”- National Union of Journalists.
“Traveller wedding belles go to town – in the shadow of mass eviction” – The Guardian.
Audio: Jess Hurd – Stop and Search – S44 Terrorism Act.
My colleague Jess Hurd – who over the weekend attended the European Federation of Journalists event “Photojournalists: An endangered species in Europe?” in Paris – was stopped and searched last week on UN Human Rights Day under the S44 of the Terrorism Act by the police. The officers “forcibly took” her camera which under S44 there do not have the power to do so.
Click here to listen to an audio file of the stop and search and below is the full statement from National Union of Journalists.
“A photographer documenting the persecution of Irish travellers in the UK was herself subjected to police intimidation on UN Human Rights Day.
“The NUJ has condemned the abuse of the police’s stop and search powers after they forcibly took photographer Jess Hurd’s camera from her and detained her for 45 minutes under S44 of the Terrorism Act whilst she was covering a traveller wedding in London Docklands, part of a long term documentary project on the persecution of travellers.
“Whilst clearly photographing a wedding, the pictures of which appeared in Saturday’s Guardian newspaper, Jess was detained under s44 on the grounds she could be carrying out hostile reconnaissance for a terrorist assault.”
NUJ General Secretary Jeremy Dear said: “This is yet another absurd misuse of the s44 powers which are designed to allow the police to detain those actively involved in carrying out a terrorist activity not to stop press photographers carrying out their legitimate business.
“Despite the government’s warm words about the right to photograph in public and new Home Office guidelines it appears the routine abuse of these powers goes on.
“How ironic that those documenting persecution and intimidation on UN Human Rights Day should be subject to such abuse and intimidation”.

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM. Irish travellers Nora Quilligan and Danny Sheridan from Dale Farm celebrate their wedding day. This was the third of four weddings held in quick succession by families at Dale Farm anxious to solemnize marriages before the New Year when Court of Appeal judges may rule that Basildon council can put into action its much delayed eviction operation. Published here by kind permission of Jess Hurd/reportdigital.co.uk. (c) Jess Hurd, 2008.