(meteorobs) Police and astronomical observations

David Stine david at exposquare.com
Tue Dec 28 10:06:13 EST 2004


All of these stories are great, someone should take all of our
encounters, put them in an orderly readable session and send them to Sky
and Tel or Astronomy for an article about Observing Encounters with the
Law.  I think it would be an enjoyable and fun read. Maybe even a book.
On the meteor side can someone tell me what night is going to be the
best to observe the Quads in Jan.  Is it the night of the 2nd and
morning of the 3rd or the night of the 3rd and the morning of the 4th.

Thanks
David in Tulsa

-----Original Message-----
From: meteorobs-bounces at meteorobs.org
[mailto:meteorobs-bounces at meteorobs.org] On Behalf Of Wayne T Hally
Sent: Tuesday, December 28, 2004 8:53 AM
To: 'Global Meteor Observing Forum'
Subject: RE: (meteorobs) Police and astronomical observations

You've got to be careful which scope. Back in the 70's I was observing
with 
my bright red Astroscan, and the officer was convinced it was a device
for 
smoking something :-0

I did manage to convince him to look at the moon through it (one of the 
Astroscan's wide field advantages), so all ended well.

Wayne

----------
From: 	Richard Taibi[SMTP:rjtaibi at hotmail.com]
Sent: 	Sunday, December 26, 2004 12:20 PM
To: 	meteorobs at meteorobs.org
Subject: 	(meteorobs) Police and astronomical observations

This seems like a "quiet" time on the list, so I hope others won't mind
a
brief off-topic issue.

Thanks to the two observers who shared their experiences with police
while
observing the sky.  It is reassuring to know that police inquiries occur
on 
an international scale!  Jeff's idea about carrying a telescope to
"prove"
you are an amateur astronomer sounds like a good one, if you don't mind
lugging it around.  I had a brief idea during my encounter of offering
to
let the cops listen to my tape-recorded observational notes.  I hoped
that
might eliminate their suspicions that I was a felon up to something.

Another unsettling incident comes back to my mind, when I volunteered to
observe grazing occultations with Dr. David Dunham about 20 years ago.
On
one occasion, I had my refractor set up, aimed at the moon and a local
policeman drove up, lights and sirens on, to investigate the scene.  To
the 
layman, a telescope, with its long tube, aimed at the sky can summon up
an
image of an artillery piece, I guess.  As in "tom's" incident a look
thru
the scope convinced him I was who I said.  In these days of worrying
about
terrorists, I suppose the police are even more vigilant than about 20
years 
ago, and perhaps more suspicious.

So, perhaps those of us who travel to a public site to observe need to
give 
some thought about how to explain ourselves should the police drop in to
chat!  Dr. Dunham had some explanatory literature written up to give the
police if the situation arose.  Perhaps this is another idea, too, for
us 
to
emulate.

Best wishes for good uninterrupted observing!    Rich


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