Legally? As long as you are on public property when you shoot, and it is not something Homeland Security restricts you are OK.
The owners of the property, their lawyers, and their agents can restrict your actions on their property. Morally? That is between you and God, or your Church, or your Conscious. Ethically? That is between you and your organization(s), or your personal feelings on the matter. So, in two out of three cases it is a matter for you to determine. -graywolf, Grouchy Old Fart Rebekah wrote: > Yesterday, I drove by the site of the Charleston Sofa Super Store > fire, which you can read up on here: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charleston_Sofa_Super_Store_fire > > My husband and I lost two friends in that fire, and it was a shock to > see it still standing. I never drove over there because I didn't want > to see it, and I figured it would have been torn down by now. For > some reason, it's still standing, and I've decided I'd like to shoot > some pictures of this in black and white, but I'm unsure of the > legality and political correctness of doing so. In order to be on the > right side of the law and not offend the families of the men who > perished, who or which government whatnot should I ask for permission? > And, if you had the opportunity to shoot this or something like it, > would you? > > rg2 > -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net

