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Behind the Yellow Tape

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Glad you found me. I'm still not up to my summer road trip pace, and our website just underwent a makeover, and my blog was for a while under the heading: "FOOD & LIVING BLOGS."

During my twenty-some years here, my newspaper has never really been known for our breaking news photography. Even during the "Golden Age" of newspaper photography at the Inquirer (the 1980's) when our staff of almost fifty photographers (we currently have half that number) traveled the world doing month-long photo essays, locally we still usually arrived on the scene after the yellow police tape went up. That was the case this week.

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We're working on it though, and the new Inquirer home page will soon have live news photos updated throughout the day starting when photographer David Swanson inaugurates a new early morning shift, shooting both stills and video.

But this past week was still old school Inquirer, when police Officer Richard Decoatsworth was shot in the face with a sawed-off shotgun ROAD29eTG.jpg after a routine traffic stop in West Philadelphia. Thankfully, after surgery his condition has improved and he has moved out of the intensive-care unit. Click on the tiny picture to see Daily News' photographer Jim MacMillan's video for a view of the scene before the yellow tape went up.

Inquirer photographer Barbara Johnston arrived before I did, and we staked out opposite ends of the street waiting for something to photograph. It ended up being the SWAT unit putting their weapons away.

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I always tell myself I should have a book handy, or bills to pay, when I'm waiting as photographers often have to do. But usually I just talk to the curious bystanders, like neighborhood resident Steve Ford who used his binoculars (that's him at the top of this post). He had been in the U.S. Army and told me, "doing a basic recon doesn't hurt. You gotta see what's going on or it'll be with you before you know it."

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Mostly I take pictures of pigeons. Or other urban wildlife. This day I photographed the "action" around the yellow tape.

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Daily News photographer Alejandro A. Alvarez used his telephoto lens and mono-pod to raise the tape for arriving police cruisers. That's Associated Press photographer Matt Rourke on the left, and Officer Brian Lauf from the 9th District at right. He was in charge of this part of the crime scene perimeter.

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Comments (3)

Anonymous:

Whose the dude with the red sweats spray painted, with a do-rag and his hood up on that hot day, on the cell phone, ignoring the police tape?

Anonymous:

Yeah, you were under "Food and Living" blogs. Guess this is living. Philly living.

What did recon guy have to say about what he thinks is going on in that neighborhood that contributed to this?

TomG:

The all-red guy WAS trying to slip past the police line -- high profile outfit and all. He didn't get far though. The police officer on the corner was just temporarily distracted while helping a resident. I should compile a collection of photos of "multi-tasking" cell phone users. TomG

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Photographer

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Tom Gralish is a general assignment photographer at The Inquirer, concentrating on local news and self-generated feature photos. He has been at the paper since 1983, photographing everything from revolution in the Philippines to George W. Bush’s road to the White House to his Pulitzer Prize-winning photo essay of homeless people in the city.

For his photo essay on Philadelphia’s homeless, he was awarded both the Pulitzer Prize and the Robert F. Kennedy Award. During the first Gulf War, he was the photo editor in Saudi Arabia for all newspaper photographers embedded with U.S. military units.

His weekly column, "Scene on the Street," takes a look at Philadelphia's urban landscape.


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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on September 28, 2007 1:14 PM.

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